Barbarians at the Gate - a Blackbird show on SuperRare

Barbarians at the Gate | September 8 – October 13, 2022

Blackbird on SuperRare

Blackbird works with contemporary artists who have a critical and thoughtful practise away from the world of digital art. Using the SuperRare Spaces platform, and the NFT or crypto art audience which that provides, artists are able to reimagine their work and take it in unexpected directions. In this fifth Blackbird show, the first as a SuperRare Space, four contemporary artists approach the worlds of digital animation and the enormous possibilities it allows.

"Working now in the world of NFTs, is a bit like being in at the start of vinyl and the 3-minute pop song. The experimentation and blue sky possibilities are incredibly exciting."

The expression 'barbarians at the gate' was used by the Romans to describe foreign attacks against their empire. It is now often used within a sarcastic, or ironic context, when speaking about a perceived threat from a rival group of people, often deemed to be less capable or somehow primitive.

Blackbird understands that not even the most celebrated traditional contemporary artists will necessarily be successful in making the switch to a digitally native format, but we believe that these artists will make an incredibly valuable long-term contribution to crypto art and how it is seen in the future. They bring progressive and conceptually thoughtful work and there is a real excitement for this to be a forum for brilliant experimentation.

https://www.superrare.com/spaces/blackbird-contemporary-art-nft/gallery

JAMES SCOTT BROOKS / KATE STREET / MARKUS VATER / DOUGLAS WHITE

 

This series of animations by JAMES SCOTT BROOKS utilises the verbs from 1960’s folk songs that were attempting to encourage action and change in society and the environment. The artwork utilises nuanced footage and images that explores a relationship between nature and civilisation and the delicate balance between progress and detrimental change. In addition, the specific verbs have been aligned to system-based sound creativity intentionally developing a pertinent and melancholic folk rock instrumentation.

Verbs of a Folk Song II

 

KATE STREET presents her Celestial Bodies series. In astrological terms a celestial body is a single, tightly bound, contiguous entity. These silent floating entities each pertain to their own characteristics whilst talking of human relations, fetishism and otherness.

Symbiosis

 

MARKUS VATER

Sometimes this is how life feels like: Living inside a large mouth, being carried around, in danger of being swallowed at any moment. But we make the best of this existential precarity, by using the tongue as a bouncy castle, together with someone we like. There is nothing better, than bouncing together.

Life

 

Triclops III

 
 

For information on how to purchase an NFT please click here for an explanatory Blog post.

 

Clyde Hopkins at The Dock Museum

Panhandle Painting: A Retrospective

18th June - 28th August

This exhibition, looking back at the life and work of Clyde Hopkins, has been selected from paintings in the artist’s own collection. We would like to thank Marilyn Hallam for her generosity in loaning the work.

“You would expect a body of work, created over a span more than forty years, to display a pattern of development from early attempts, to the mature output where an artist’s ‘signature style’ has fully evolved and is then consolidated. But the paintings of Clyde Hopkins seem to resist this schematic interpretation. Those from the late seventies and early eighties are stylistically different to those produced in the late eighties. Another change occurs in the nineties and from 2008 or thereabouts the paintings seem to take on characteristics almost the opposite of those to be found in work from earlier in his career. So, instead of one signature style, there are several.

Each of these signature styles is fully resolved and sufficient, rather than marking an evolutionary stage in an ongoing narrative.”

Clyde Hopkins: A path through dark and light © David Sweet

Clyde Hopkins was born in East Sussex in 1946, moving with his family to Barrow-in-Furness when he was 11. He attended Barrow grammar school and then studied Fine Art at the University of Reading in the 1960’s where he met his future wife, the painter, Marilyn Hallam. He exhibited internationally for over forty years and taught in many art colleges and universities. In 1982 he was appointed Head of Painting at Winchester School of Art. He moved to Chelsea College of Art in 1990 and was made an Emeritus Professor after leaving in 2006.

 

As a painter and an educator Clyde had a profound and lasting influence on all those around him - an influence which continues to be assessed with his inclusion in the Tate Collection in 2020, and solo shows in Barrow, Deal, London and New York in 2022 and 2023. As the weight and significance of his work is brought to light through exhibition and publication, it becomes increasingly clear that his contribution to contemporary painting, and British abstraction in particular, was extraordinary.

A retrospective exhibition curated by Greg Rook.