Thea Djordjadze
Possibility, Nansen  

28 July – 2 September 2007, Thursday – Sunday 1 - 6pm
Preview: Friday 27 July 6 - 9pm


Studio Voltaire is pleased to announce the first solo exhibition in the United Kingdom by the Cologne based artist, Thea Djordjadze.  In partnership with the Goethe-Institut, London, the artist will be resident at Studio Voltaire for an intense work period, producing new works specifically for the exhibition onsite.  This new commission will be Studio Voltaire’s fifth artists’ commission following Liam Gillick (2004), Joanne Tatham & Tom O’Sullivan (2005), Spartacus Chetwynd (2005) and Chris Evans (2006).

Pampel Gross

Djordjadze’s working method draws from literature and music as well as art historical references from early Modernism, particularly Surrealism. This is combined with a strong sense of process and an awareness of the potential authority and phenomenology of the art object. Often working with everyday and found materials such as fabric, glass, wood, metal and ceramics the artist typically makes small to medium scale organic constructions that combine an almost ‘Beuysian’ shamanistic or ritualistic use of materials with the formalism of early modernist sculptural objects.  Drawing on the tropes of Surrealist juxtaposition of everyday objects and the narrative conceit of the aura of shamanistic presentation of materials, the resulting works are psychologically effecting and uncomfortable.  

Thea Djordjadze
 
Originally born in Georgia, Thea Djordjadze now lives and works in Cologne.  The artist studied under Rosemarie Trockel and has a growing reputation within Europe as an important emerging voice within contemporary sculptural practice.  Previous exhibitions and projects include History of an Encounter, Micky Schubert, Berlin (2007); Mondi Possibili, Sprueth Magers, Cologne (2007 and 2006); Modus, Neue Kunst Halle, St Gallen (2006); Pampel, Mohr-Villa, Marienplatz, Munich (offsite project) (2006); 7, Sprueth Magers Lee, London (2006); Play, Stadtmuseum Dusseldorf, Dusseldorf (2005) and Zero Gravity, Kunstverein Dusseldorf, Dusseldorf (2001). Djordjadze was also a founding member of the collective hobbypopMUSEUM. The artist is represented by Sprueth Magers, Munich/Cologne/London and Micky Schubert, Berlin.
 
In collaboration with the Goethe-Institut, London and supported by The Henry Moore Foundation


PUBLISH AND BE DAMNED -SELF PUBLISHING FAIR 2007
SUNDAY 29 JULY 2007, 2 - 7pm
AT: Rochelle School, Arnold Circus, London E2 7ES
 
The fourth Publish and be Damned takes place on Sunday 29 July 2007 at Rochelle School in Shoreditch, from 2 - 7pm

Control

Publish and Be Damned profiles individual and experimental approaches to making and distributing the work of artists, writers and musicians outside of the commercial mainstream, encompassing DIY fanzines, magazines, critical journals, glossy periodicals, video compendiums and independent record labels. The fair offers a rare opportunity to discover a wide variety of publications and to meet their editors.  

The fair continues to profile a range of London based publications such as Stephen Willats' CONTROL magazine, Babak Ghazi's Not Yet hand-produced publication and the community based fanzines produced by the art and architecture collective, Publicworks.   The event also provides a unique platform for many publications from across United Kingdom and aboard. These include queer-feminist journal LTTR, New York and Berlin's Starship.

Studio Voltaire is supporting the administration of this years fair.  For further information please see http://www.publishandbedamned.org.uk

PUBLISH AND BE DAMNED FAIR 2007 is funded by Arts Council England, London and The Elephant Trust
And has received generous support from Afoundation and Studio Voltaire