21/03/2016

Following the Lines



First article, I think, celebrating the 25 years of the release of Massive Attack's Blue Lines, masterpiece of an album and source of many moments of happiness for thousands of people over the two and something decades...


Here is the link:
https://blueblueneonglow.wordpress.com/2016/03/19/massive-attack-blue-lines-25-years-on/


And some beautiful and relevant extracts:



BlueLines_190316


As a collection its greatest strength is the way that it blends the multiple voices of the collective into a distinctive British outlook without losing coherence. The obvious reference here is the “English upbringing, background Caribbean” line in the title track, echoed in the  ‘Subbuteo and Studio One’ couplet from “Five Man Army” but there are many lines in that loose jostling for position on the microphone that reflect the unique mix of decaying urban paranoia and joy that was Bristol in the late 80s. This is an album that could only be British – listen again and you are instantly back there on City Road the yellow sodium street lights reflecting in the puddles on the cobbles outside of the Moon Club, in the windows of the death trap kebab shop near the Tropic Club or on the one way system near the Western Star Domino Club. 

Jazz musicians absorb multiple influences and styles, internally processing them to forge something new and different when they play – Massive Attack pulled off something similar yet more extraordinary here. Rather than just synthesize the joy of the wonderful music, clubs and parties of late 80s city life they somehow captured the whole environment. So “Blue Lines” channels that gauntlet of suspicion and mistrust that had to be run to get to the gigs, places outside of the ‘heritage rock’, pastel coloured woolen jumpers and stripey shirts that constituted mainstream culture in the immediate post Live Aid era.

(...)


It is that intense collective solidarity, looking to stand alongside friends and family against what a mostly hostile world throws your way that stands out today. Our society has been atomised into individual screen shaped cocoons – bought off with cheap disposable consumer goods, while successive governments ceded the ability to collect tax from a self-appointed elite. In 1991 “Safe From Harm” sounded pessimistic, defensive, its propulsive Billy Cobham sample belying the lyric of holding onto your loved ones being the best that we could do – in 2016 it sounds proportionate, positively the best possible outcome of some grim options.

Music this focused and passionate is difficult to make. The painter Frank Auerbach is said to build his finished works through painting over many versions of the same subject – travelling multiple routes through the material, digesting the possibilities with each a rehearsal for the one where he knows it is complete. Rather than the stoned laziness of legend, Massive Attack have always sounded like they have much in common with this approach. When they let an album out into the world it feels as if it has been argued over, every rhythm pattern debated to death, every possibility explored. While the results usually justify the approach, it’s a creative process that has clearly taken its toll on the collective. Shara Nelson the voice of the much celebrated hit singles “Unfinished Sympathy” and “Safe From Harm” was first to leave after “Blue Lines”, followed by Tricky after its follow up “Protection”.

(...)

But without that intensity it is arguable that Massive Attack would not have been such an example of how to make credible modern music. Unlike more timid contemporaries, they have given a platform to organisations like Human Rights campaigners Reprieve without embarrassing themselves or boring their audience. It is this consistent, human, world view that serves as a reminder of a time when bands were prepared to articulate beliefs that went beyond buying an expensive car and ostentatious jewelry. The return of Massive Attack this year is something to anticipate, savour and celebrate – but let’s not forget where the story started.


17/03/2016

'Ritual Spirit' - The Visuals



London highlight, March 2016


3D's exhibition at Lazarides Editions in South London: Massive Attack, Ritual Spirit





Exhibition
3D: Massive Attack, Ritual Spirit

Lazarides Editions
Wednesday 3rd of February 2016 to Saturday 2nd of April 2016
Featuring 3D
Lazarides Editions is thrilled to welcome Bristol-based artist Robert Del Naja, aka 3D, with the launch of the new Massive Attack EP, Ritual Spirit. Coinciding with the band's three sell-out shows at London's Brixton Academy from 3rd to 5th February, the artist will take over the South Bank gallery with the release of a hand-finished special edition EP, presented alongside a new box set of limited edition prints and a selection of works by the artist that document the visual history of the band.
Ritual Spirit marks the band's first release since Heligoland in 2010. Each of the 300 limited edition 12" EP sleeves are artfully hand-finished by Del Naja in Lazarides' own print studio on Greenwich Peninsula. 200 will be available for purchase for £30 at Sea Container House at 22 Upper Ground, SE1.
Celebrating the launch of Ritual Spirit, the artist has collaborated with Lazarides Editions studio to create 25 clothbound portfolios containing seven hand-crafted screenprints, each individually signed and numbered, and featuring the artist's iconic symbol prints. Splashed across their album artwork, Del Naja's imagery featured in the box set has become instantly recognizable to fans globally as universal symbols and iconography for the band.
































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Exhibition dates

The exhibition runs from 3rd February 2016 to 2nd April 2016

Opening hours

Tuesday–Saturday 11am–7pm. Admission is free

Contact details

Closest tube stations

Blackfriars (5min walk); Southwark (10min walk)

13/03/2016

Ashton Court


Just a perfect Sunday.
Green spaces, blue skies, winter going on spring, lovely smiley people and some much for later.

A few shots of Ashton Court Mansion and Gardens, Bristol.













11/03/2016

X - Still Here - Lazarides Gallery: Ten Years of Exceptional Out-of-the-Box Art


Just another day in London...
But what a great day!

Many memories at many street corners... and many discoveries.

Hightlight:

The 'Still Here - A Decade of Lazarides' exhibition in Central London at the Lazarides Gallery.
3D, JR and Banksy's artworks wrong talented others. 




JR:



3D:









And more:





Banksy's corner:







Recent graffiti:




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Details:


Exhibition
Group Show: Still Here, A Decade Of Lazarides

Lazarides Rathbone
Friday 12th of February 2016 to Thursday 24th of March 2016
In February 2016, Lazarides will celebrate its 10th anniversary with a group exhibition from the gallery's most celebrated and pioneering artists. For the landmark exhibition, the gallery has invited back those artists who have helped shape the gallery to take over their flagship space in the heart of London's Fitzrovia.
Visitors to the gallery will be invited to view unique originals across the three floors of at Lazarides Rathbone by over 30 artists significant to the gallery's legacy: 3D, Aiko, Anthony Lister, Antony Micallef, Banksy, Brett Amory, Chloe Early, David Choe, Doug Foster, FAILE, Frank Laws, Gary Taxali, Herbert Baglione, Hush, Ian Francis, Invader, Joe Rush, Jonathan Yeo, JR, Karim Zeriahen, Katrin Fridriks, Know Hope, Lucy McLauchlan, Marcus Jansen, Mark Jenkins, Miaz Brothers, Mode 2, Nina Pandolfo, Oliver Jeffers, Pete Hawkins, Ron English, Sage Vaughn, Scott Campbell, Sickboy, Stanley Donwood, TEACH, Todd James, Vhils, Xenz and Zevs. These varied artists have formed the backbone of Lazarides' mission, each challenging the norm of what is acceptable within the art world, simultaneously providing art that is free and accessible to an international public without discrimination.
Over the last decade, Lazarides has assumed a pivotal role promoting those artists thriving outside the conventional contemporary art market. Since Steve Lazarides' conception of Lazarides in 2006, the gallery has spanned international territories and undergone myriad transformations that echo its artists' constantly evolving and progressing practice.
Since the inception of the gallery's current space on Rathbone Place, Lazarides has hosted numerous, diverse exhibitions, including JR's Crossing (2015) featuring his latest film ELLIS, and 3D's Fire Sale (2013), a retrospective of imagery paying homage to Massive Attack's visual history. Lazarides continues to be a forerunner in revolutionary off-site projects and immersive art experiences – from Los Angeles to New York, Frankfurt, Moscow and Istanbul – as well as taking part in art fairs and collaborating with museums, partner galleries, art fairs and private collection around the globe.
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Read also here:

Steve Lazarides on His S|2 Show and the Rise of Street Art


http://www.sothebys.com/en/news-video/blogs/all-blogs/contemporary/2016/03/steve-lazarides-they-would-be-kings-exhibition-street-art.html?cmp=social_hk0686_twitter_s2_kings_30916-32616

Street art, says Steve Lazarides, is “not just about backpacks and spray cans anymore. It’s something bigger.” And he would know. The pioneering London-based dealer first encountered street art growing up in the UK during the 1980s and went on to launch the careers of numerous boldface names, including Invader, JR and, perhaps most famously, Banksy. Now, Lazarides has curated They Would Be Kings, a selling exhibition at Sotheby’s Hong Kong Gallery that highlights the work of early street artists such as Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat as well as contemporary masters like KAWS, Vhils and Os Gemeos. Ahead of the show’s opening on 17 March, we spoke with Lazarides about the rise of street art, his role as a dealer and what he’s looking for in the next wave of artists.