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Spike Island Reinvents Studio Model For The
21st Century Spike Island, a leading national centre for the production and
exhibition of contemporary art in the UK, has completed a £2.25m
redevelopment by award-winning architects Caruso St John with substantial
contribution to the redesign by artists Hayley Tompkins and Sue Tompkins.
The project has recently been short-listed for an RIBA Award. Spike Island
is re-launching on May Bank Holiday (4/6 May) with an open studios weekend
and an opportunity to see current exhibitions by Mark Lewis and
Mahali O'Hare. The newly launched Associate Programme complements the studio spaces and provides further flexible facilities for artists, writers and curators who need different sorts of information and working environments. Situated within a new library and production space, the programme is devoted to the development of 'an ideas culture', inviting shared knowledge and a habit of collaboration. Spike Island will always be led by the visual arts and aims for a sustainable economy. In addition to the rental of the artists' studios, the organisation makes over two thirds of its annual turnover through letting to creative companies. The University of the West of England base their entire Fine Art Undergraduate programme within the building. In April, Spike Design will open, offering desk space, advice and mentoring to over 20 new design companies. Spike Design will foster a new generation of designers. The impact of this mix under one roof is felt across the creative community in Bristol. Spike Island's new energies and comprehensive vision increases Bristol's rich cultural offer, and further supports the city's aspiration as a dynamic centre of excellence in the UK. Lucy Byatt, Artistic Director, Spike Island says: "'We remain close to the values of the artist led origins of Spike Island. However this development has been a fantastic opportunity to re-invent the studio model of the 80's, take from it all that we continue to require and identify a set of new priorities for the 21st century. Investment in the development of new work is vital here. Through the residency programme or through the work we do within the fast growing arts community in Bristol, Spike Island plays an essential role in ensuring a lively, informed and dynamic arts community. We can offer an active and stimulating environment and some of the best facilities in the UK to artists and others working within the contemporary visual arts" END For further press information and images please contact: Kallaway Anna Cusden 020 7221 7883 anna.cusden@kallaway.co.uk Spike Island Karen di Franco 0117 929 2266 karen.difranco@spikeisland.org.uk
5 April - 27 May 2006 Mark Lewis' films are remarkable not only for their rich and highly seductive qualities, but also for their extraordinary ability to undermine those characteristics that define mainstream and avant-garde cinema. Lewis draws parallels between the film and art worlds and suggests that the evolution of film and technology are intrinsically linked to other visual cultures. Spike Island is delighted to be showing a series of works by Mark Lewis. Rear Projection (Molly Parker) and Rear Projection (Golden Rod) were commissioned by FACT (Foundation for Art and Creative Technology) in partnership with the British Film Institute and Centro Andaluz de Arte Contemporaneo. Funded by Film London through the London Artists' Film and Video Awards and Arts Council England. Other works have been made available courtesy of the artist and the Arts Council Collection.
Mahali O'Hare's paintings are small. They are of a size that makes every minute detail of vital importance; from the depth of the stretcher to the edge and fold of the canvas. The way in which they are hung in the space does not instruct a narrative but it is difficult to resist building one's own. The images seem to have been painted somewhere beneath the surface of the paint. O'Hare is sparing with her information yet we know that each work has emerged from photography, not the large glamorous silky image but the slightly dog eared photograph that might be found in the pages of an old book or at the back of a drawer.
Olli Keränen - Terhi Heino - Tanja Koistila - Karen Di Franco - Toby Huddlestone - John Lawrence - Lisa Scantlebury This project has been made possible through funding and support by; FRAME, HIAP, Spike Island, STATION and Arts Council South West.
The capital redevelopment has made the most of Spike Island's large spaces
and a number of new initiatives have been established as part of the capital
development. These include: Residency Programme Artists' residencies before the re-development have led to new commissions
by Lucy Gunning, Runa Islam and Jaqueline Donachie, Kevin Reid and Ganghut
and James Ireland. Curatorial residencies have included Juliana Engberg,
now Director of ACCA in Melbourne and Nav Haq, curator at Gasworks. For
full details of the past programme, please see www.spikeisland.org.uk. About Caruso St John Architects Since the completion of the New Art Gallery, the practice has worked for many institutional and private clients in the field of museums and galleries. They have worked for the National Gallery and for the V&A on the refurbishment and extension of the Museum of Childhood in Bethnal Green and most recently they have been appointed architects to Tate Britain. In 2004 they completed the new Gagosian Gallery in Britannia Street, Kings Cross, and they are currently on site with a new Centre for Contemporary Art in Nottingham, due to open in 2008. Their sensitivity to the installation of a wide range of art has also led to invitations to design exhibitions at a number of leading institutions, including the British Museum, Hayward Gallery, Tate Britain, Tate Modern, the Cartier Foundation in Paris, the Pitti Palace in Florence, and the Kunsthaus Bregenz.
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