LARRY LOVES YOU
- an evening of performance, live music, art and short films -
@ BAR KICK (127 Shoreditch High Stree, E1 6JE
12th August 2008, 7.30pm – midnight (doors 7pm)
tickets £5
Larry’s Goodbye wanted to give the good people of London something they deserve – a night of art of all sorts. They invited their friends (and those who are yet to become their friends) and asked them to switch on their light bulbs, get their brushes rolling, their cameras snapping, their guitars playing… The result is Larry Loves You – and evening of performance, live music, art and short films created by London’s emerging artists.
Find something you haven’t worn in a while, dust it off and come down to play at Bar Kick. You know you want to…
Artists Taking Part:- Milk, Two Sugars -
Northern Mob‘Milk, Two Sugars’ began as a need for attention coupled with a fear of obscurity. A love of drawing and a desire to communicate the deficient wisdom and combined wit of two exceptionally unfunny people is the motivation to create an array of visually stunning and ultimately forgettable images.
“We paint, make films and write a bit. We could make all the work sound really interesting and profound or we can treat it as cheap and throwaway. We like it when someone makes their own conclusion. We aren’t here to harangue or convince you that we feel pain. Art should be fun and funny and it can be both without being drained of all serious meaning.We have fun. We enjoy what we do. It isn’t important where we fit in to contemporary culture, in all honesty we really don’t seek a place at the table. We’d be happier under the table tying shoelaces together or standing before the court of the ‘glitterarti-farti’ with a microphone and some really horrible and pointless jokes. We’d prefer to be heckled by them than invited to dine. We don’t like artists that much.”
http://www.milktwosugars.org/- Clare Simmonds -
'Mark Spitz', 'Hemel Girl', 'Hangover', 'Bobby George'I love to paint unusual people, the overly beautiful don’t interest me, and even the celebrities I have painted aren’t perfect. I tend to paint people I know from photographs that are “accidental” in that they weren’t intended as reference or studies. Found objects are a major part of my work as they suit the tacky, gaudy subjects and also because I love to paint on wood. I go and scour charity shops, skips or car boot sales looking for interesting surfaces, the size and shape directs the painting. My paintings all have a sense of kitsch Britishness that is both humorous but sometimes jarring to the viewer.
http://www.degreeart.com/newsite/artist.php?id=259- Jessica Jane Charleston -‘The beast is loose and prowling everywhere'Photography by day, drawings by night.
- Priya Chohan -
'Water Fossils 3 and 4'Chohan is interested in the physicality and processes of material, using wax, clay, lead and graphite to make organic forms and create solid traces of ephemeral events. She is interested in the motion of the tide and how this relates to her own understanding of the notion of time passing. Influenced by philosophy, particularly Deleuze and Guattari’s ideas about the rhizome, and Bachelard’s 'Poetics of Space' she tries to understand her relationship with the space around her and the natural environment through experimenting with material and line. She works across painting and sculpture regarding her works as drawing, with respect to the immediacy and directness with which she makes them.
- Helen Grundy + Angel Stripe -
'Pitter Patter'
Helen is an object maker/installation artist/ experimental animator who specialises in working site specifically. In all of Helen’s work her underlying desire is to explore the space that exists between the two emotional states of comfort and discomfort. Helen often references the vulnerability of the body, the anxiety of loss and the inevitability of death in my work but presents these themes to an audience by using humour, playfulness and wonder. Helen’s aim is to present the often upsetting facts of life to viewers in a manner that does not shock them but instead amuses or delights them. Helen strives to create an arena where an audience can comfortably consider the uncomfortable.
Angel Stripe is a contemporary artist working in photography, video, & projection installation, having previously worked in multi-media and sound art. Her current work explores the hierarchy of subject matter, specifically questioning kitsch and the domestic through the examination of stereotypes. She employs subversion through the juxtaposition of kitsch and abject elements, and uses scale changes to puncture familiarity.
"The underlying concern of my practice is controlling the uncontrollable, particularly with reference to states of mind. It is currently informed by investigations into gender constructs, the kitsch aesthetic and the abject. I have also started to include my self in the work, to explore the performative. More recently this has extended to examining the idea of human becoming-animal, the idea of hybrids being useful in expressing mental states. I am interested in investigating how taking on board animal characteristics & behaviours can help us to extend our access and description of our own state of being."
- Matthew Giraudeau -
'Specific Cultural Reference #1', 'Two Friends', 'Specific Cultural Reference #2, 'Pandas', 'Specific Cultural Reference #3, 'Unnon'Matthew Giraudeau is a filmmaker, writer and performance artist. His work deals with the epistemological struggle that faces us every day. What do we know and how do we know it? We all exist within this gulf between belief and knowledge, its just most of us choose to ignore it. There is no solution to the problem, only ways of becoming at ease with it. Stuck floating between reality and theory is an ugly place called ‘funny’. Matthew Giraudeau sits on a chair that is slightly too small for him, in an ill-fitting suit, within that chinless realm. Humour allows us to be both within and without. Matthew Giraudeau's work attempts to transcend the reactionary nature of humour in an ultimately doomed attempt to place value at the centre of action.
-Kevin Konak-
Kevin Konak writes music because it's the only thing he can do, and he likes it. He writes songs to tell stories. The less you know, the more you can make up and the more you'll understand.
“I saw an old friend yesterday. I went back in time and traveled to every single place I had been happy at. I saw some people lying on the floor, carefully looking for lost times. I decided to do the same. So I tried to learn magic and I sang some songs.”
www.myspace.com/kevinkonakAND OF COURSE LARRY... Larry will be performing a new show
'But it's not me...' part 1 + part 2
Check the website out for more details...
http://www.larrysgoodbye.co.uk/