So, welcome to the blog! Anyone who used to read my
exploits on the SAW blog will be familiar that every once and a while I used
to create a post that reviews a new art book. Therefore, it is with great
pleasure that I bring you those same proceedings here on 'spanner in the
workZ'! This first review is very special as it features a self-published book
by an artist Chris Chapman. I'll make no apologies for my obvious bias for the
simple fact that Chris is a good friend of mine and peer whom I studied Fine
Art with at Somerset College. Nonetheless I wish to (as objectively as I can)
pay dues, review and acknowledge in the public realm her work presented in this
unique and professional book.
Titled, ‘100 Cans’ this book, pardon the pun, is
literally what it says on the tin! 100 photos of cans found on roadsides,
picked up by the artist and photographed. Sounds simple, and in a way it is,
but therein lies its beauty. Who when out on a walk or in a car ever stops to
look at a squashed beer can discarded in a hedge? Its rubbish, why would we
ever pause to look at it, yet alone admire it? And you can forget about
thinking about picking up someone else’s can, you don’t know WHERE it’s been!
Chris Chapman DOES go picking up those cans, in fact she actively goes out
specifically in search of them. Whilst most artists (and I hold my hand up to
being in this category) are in the studio making mess from bought materials she
is outside making it from the stuff that others have thrown away. It’s an
exciting philosophy and one that has resonances of alchemy and the idea of
‘turning something out of nothing’. The intention certainly isn’t to make those
who prefer the studio, like myself, feel guilty. I do, like many others, my
fare share of recycling and don’t go around throwing my rubbish anywhere other
than a bin, but it does highlight the issues of waste and how through an art
practice of looking at something seen as ‘waste’ as ‘art’ can possibly be beneficial
in pricking the conscious of our consumerist society and how we think about
litter.
In Chapman’s words the project is fully titled, “100 cans
after Andy Warhol. This book is one of a series highlighting the issues of
waste, litter and flytipping in the local environment.” Art history fans
amongst you will need no explanation to the reference this work has with
Warhol’s silkscreen prints of Campbell soup cans in the 60’s-70’s. Back then
consumerism, shopping and spending were the holy grail of American culture, the
lifestyle, wealth, business and popularity that surrounded it. Supermarkets
were galleries and galleries were like supermarkets to Warhol. Less than thirty
years later and we began to see the affects of our consumerist and throw-away lifestyles.
The glossy advertising, colours and logos of Warhol’s cans are replaced by the
reality of their used, crushed, rusty counterparts in Chapman’s photos. In a
painful irony Chapman’s cans look more like Warhol’s ‘car crash’ screen prints
than his soup cans, but if anything it shows that despite his consumerist
tendencies that Warhol was also all too aware of the fragility of man-made objects. Perhaps in a way Warhol also had the
right idea in highlighting the ‘beauty’ of packaging with his soup cans and
brillo boxes showing a reverence for the packaging as to its contents. Maybe in
‘waste’ terms if we all had a similar respect or at least awareness for the
packaging around the product instead of just its contents then maybe Chris
would have to find another subject matter for her work?!
What’s interesting ,if not also depressingly accurate is
that Chapman doesn’t need to put a context to these images in the way of saying
where exactly they were found because they could be found anywhere. They are a
common if embarrassingly familiar site on any road, park or hedgerow. Like the American
artist Mierle Laderman Ukeles who swept the streets of New York as a piece of
environmental art activism, Chapman is another one of that category of artists
doing a service for society whilst also collecting the discarded cans that
become the subject of her work.
For me, the images of cans in this book are depicted like
ancient archaeological relics (each one coated in specks of dirt, encrusted
with weathered signs of age, leaf litter and rust) are given the prestige of
its own page, glistening against a white background. Some are almost
unrecognisable as a can and become jewelled fragments each and everyone unique
and of different shape. No two squashed cans are the same shape, the same
contortion or the same rusting. It is easy to see how one can become obsessed
with the formal qualities of these objects as each is so unique.
Walking to the shop for the paper this morning I saw
several cans along the roadside and instead of not ever really noticing them at
all, I began to first attempt to identify them like an urban can-spotter. I
then actually picked several up and put them into a bag, ‘every little helps’.
I can’t say that I’ll have the time or conscience to do this every time I leave
the house, but at the very least I am more aware of cans and indeed litter than
I used to be and if I can’t beat them by picking them all up then at least I
can learn to appreciate them.
If you’re
interested in contacting the artist then please email:
Or you can buy
‘100 CANS’ and other books by Chris Chapman at:
This made me think of another photography project I saw- pretty upsetting to look at but sort of a similar theme:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.chrisjordan.com/gallery/midway/#about
Woah! That is definitely upsetting, but also very interesting and would make anyone think twice about throwing anything away if they knew what it could do. Shocking.
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