Anthony James (artist)

Anthony James (born 1974 in England) is a British artist, known for his sculpture and installations.

Education

Anthony James studied from 1994-98 at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London. After his degree, he moved to New York and in 2008 to Los Angeles, before he came to Munich in 2013. His works have been exhibited internationally, including Art Basel (2010) in Basel[1] and Miami Beach. They are also part of private and public collections, such as the General Motors Building, New York, or the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art.

Work

James gained recognition with his large-size work KΘ, short for kalos thanatos (Greek for beautiful death), from 2008. KΘ consists of a 244 x 244 x 488 cm, double mirrored show case that contains James‘ burned 355 Ferrari Spyder, which he destroyed in an act of sacrifice derived from Greek antiquity.[2] The mirrored glass multiplies the remains of the car ad infinitum and the moment of destruction is frozen in time.[3] The piece was first presented at a preview for the MoMA Associates, New York,[4] and in 2010 at a solo show at Patrick Painter Inc., Los Angeles.

In 2013 James moved to Munich and created 21 amorphous bronze sculptures on stands of shell limestone. Inspired by Robert Rauschenberg‘s Cardboard-series,[5] the artist submerged and molded cardboard boxes in wax, in order to burn them afterwards and cast them in bronze. That way the processual and fragile moment of transition from solid to ash was captured and perpetuated.'They look weightless, almost fragile, and yet, they are incredibly heavy and steardy.'[6] The works investigate the concept of mortality and recollection; they reflect the relationship between our present and the mythologies of the past. The title of the 2014 show "Morphic Fields" at Walter Storms Galerie refers to a quote by British biologist Rupert Sheldrake,[7] who describes the process of transformation and the passing on of recollection in nature in his ‘hypothesis of formative causation’.[8] The American author and art critic Glenn O'Brien said about James 'There’s a kind of oracular vibe about the work, as if staring at it might be good.’[9]

Publications

References

  1. Lindsay Pollock and Charlotte Burns (18 June 2010) "It's about more than Matisse", The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 2014-04-08.
  2. Hannah Elliott (6 September 2011) "Riding With Anthony James: The Artist Who Torched His Ferrari", Forbes Magazine. Retrieved 2014-04-08.
  3. Sharon Mizota (4 November 2010) "Art Review: Anthony James at Patrick Painter", Culture Monster (Los Angeles Times). Retrieved 2014-04-08.
  4. artnet Magazine - Crash Test, by Charlie Finch
  5. Matthias Mühling: An Interview with Anthony James, in: Anthony James. Morphic Fields, Hatje Cantz, 2014, p. 76
  6. Matthias Mühling: An Interview with Anthony James, in: Anthony James. Morphic Fields, Hatje Cantz, 2014, p. 81
  7. Abendzeitung - Galerie Walter Storms. Anthony James' Morphische Felder
  8. Katja Eichinger: An Interview with Rupert Sheldrake, in: Anthony James. Morphic Fields, Hatje Cantz, 2014, p. 52
  9. Glenn O'Brien: Casual Magic. The Art of Anthony James, in: Anthony James. Morphic Fields, Hatje Cantz, 2014, p. 70
  10. http://www.hatjecantz.de/anthony-james-6131-1.html

External links

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