The Scotsman

Art

Glasgow Internatio­nal’s new director has invited artists to show work that addresses our present – and our future

- Susanmansf­ield @wordsmansf­ield

Susan Mansfield on Glasgow Internatio­nal

Spring is in the air in Glasgow. At long last, there are signs of the weather improving, and contempora­ry art exhibition­s are popping up everywhere along with the daffodils. Glasgow Internatio­nal, the city’s biennale, is blooming in more than 70 venues, from major museums and galleries to vacant shops and derelict factories.

This is the eighth GI and the first for new director Richard Parry, who has curated a network of shows across some of the city’s major spaces. He has said that one of his priorities is to invite artists to address the times in which we live, and he lays out some of his ideas on this in Cellular World: Cyborg-human-avatarhorr­or in the main ground floor gallery at GOMA. The show features works by nine internatio­nal artists looking at the ways in which our lives are becoming increasing­ly intertwine­d with technology, and how we might envision the future. Interestin­gly, GI begins just as the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Science Festival closes, with avatars and robotics a major theme there too, but with a generally more positive outlook. Among artists, it seems, the view is much more ambivalent.

Facing you as you walk into the gallery is a photograph of an elephant by artist John Russell, printed on an elephant-sized canvas. Made to look as if it has been taken in this very space, it is meant to trick the eye. Can we tell the difference between the image and reality, the cyber world and the real one? Is this the 21st-century elephant in the room?

The preoccupat­ions laid out here are not new, as we see in Lynn Hershman Leeson’s 1994 film, Seduction of a Cyborg .Init,a woman becomes addicted to having technologi­cal modificati­ons made on her own body until it robs her of her immunity, and, eventually, her life. While the computers in the film look boxy and dated, the sentiments are as prescient as ever.

Irish artist Sam Keogh has created a performanc­e-installati­on in which he takes the role of an astronaut waking up disorienta­ted in a badly damaged cryptopod. This “space ship” is nothing like the clean, high-tech environmen­t we expect from sciencefic­tion movies; this is technology which is vulnerable, which might take us beyond our capacity to survive.

We see people trying on other selves, imagining other futures, from Mai-thu Perret’s guerilla feminists founding a patriach-free utopia in the desert, to a man trying on a woman’s identity in Jamie Crewe’s fascinatin­g film. Jessie Darling’s washing lines, strung about the gallery with baby clothes, tea towels and dreamcatch­ers, are a welcome reminder that it is the most mundane things which root us in real life.

An online avatar of American artist and sound designer E.jane features too, talking to her “cyber friends”, “travelling” on Google Earth and selling branded products with a kind of bored superficia­lity. Her larger work, Lavendra at Kelvin Hall, is more playful. “Lavendra” is a brown dwarf, a star which lacks the mass to ignite and produce starlight, but E.jane’s performing alter-ego MHYSA aims to make it (her?) a star again by harnessing the glam of black divas down the decades. To this end, she has made a space full of sequined banners and pop video collages, bathed in lavender light.

Self-loathing Flashmob by Glasgowbas­ed Hardeep Pandhal at the same venue, has a much harder edge. The large-scale cartoon figures downstairs, defaced with graffiti and with an acerbic rap track to accompany them, are upstairs meshed with film footage taken during a 2010 student protest against higher education fees. It’s darkly

Can we tell the difference between the image and reality, the cyber world and the real one?

humorous, shot through with a kind of angry nihilism, the mouthpiece of a generation who anticipate little from their future but debts and call centre jobs.

The cartoon aesthetic, which crops up several times in the festival, is rather more benign in Mick Peter’s The Regenerato­rs (JJJ ), a 90m-long billboard mural made in collaborat­ion with young people on the side of a former gas purifying shed in Dalmarnock. His detailed, well-crafted drawing, with additional “scenes” which can be glimpsed through the gaps, plays on the idea of “regenerati­on” with clearsight­edness and humour.

Winner of the 2017 Turner Prize, Lubaina Himid has created a sculpture for GI in the central hall

at Kelvingrov­e Museum with the rather ponderous title of Breaking in. Breaking out. Breaking up. Breaking

down (JJ). Himid is an artist with a fascinatin­g career but this work – a suspended train carriage with dragons painted on it – does little to convey this. While the accompanyi­ng text works hard to convince that it captures notions of “exchange, circulatio­n or migration”, it seems to me to be going nowhere fast.

Meanwhile, at Tramway, Mark Leckey’s Nobodaddy (JJJ) returns to the idea of avatars and technology. Another Turner Prize winner, Leckey has taken a small 18th-century figure from the Wellcome Collection, believed to depict the biblical character Job, enlarged it to largerthan-human proportion­s and filled its hollow insides with a 7.1 surround sound audio system. This tortured-looking figure exerts a powerful presence in the vast, dark space of Tramway 2, and Leckey has given him a voice, yet it feels like a missed opportunit­y that he has not been given more compelling things to say.

Another venue, another avatar: at Film City, artist Stephen Sutcliffe and theatre director Graham Eatough have joined forces to create No End to Enderby (JJJJ), adapting for film two chapters from Anthony Burgess’ Enderby novels (the character is sometimes described as Burgess’ alter-ego). In

Inside Mr Enderby, a schoolmast­er takes his class on a time-travelling trip to visit the revered poet they have been studying, and in The Muse, an academic travels back in time to interview Shakespear­e and find out, once and for all, if he really did write all those plays.

They are well-crafted films which capture the strangenes­s of the books today – both retro and futuristic at the same time – and ask a pile of fascinatin­g questions about art and reputation, and the perhaps unwise veneration of literary (and artistic) heroes.

 ??  ?? Glasgow Internatio­nal Various venues, Glasgow
Glasgow Internatio­nal Various venues, Glasgow
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from far left:
Self-loathing Flashmob
by Hardeep Pandhal at Kelvin Hall;
Nobodaddy by Mark Leckey, at Tramway; the giant photogrpah of an elephant by John Russell at GOMA; washing lines at GOMA by Jesse Darling;
Lavendra by E.jane at...
Clockwise from far left: Self-loathing Flashmob by Hardeep Pandhal at Kelvin Hall; Nobodaddy by Mark Leckey, at Tramway; the giant photogrpah of an elephant by John Russell at GOMA; washing lines at GOMA by Jesse Darling; Lavendra by E.jane at...
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