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June 23, 2009

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Gilbert & George, Britbrats (detail), 2008
Gilbert & George, Britbrats (detail), 2008

New Photography


Photography plays an important role in art and advertising, news and publishing, and our everyday lives. The camera can sometimes seem to be the easiest, most direct way to record an image, but getting it right and saying something with results is a more skillful task. In this issue of Artkrush, we partner with The Daily Beast to present a new series of work by provocative British artists Gilbert & George, and look at the equally lively and stirring fashion work by their fellow countryman Miles Aldridge.

- Paul Laster, Managing Editor
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FEATURE
Gilbert & George »
Turner Prize-winning duo reinterprets the Union Jack
Gilbert & George, <I>Brits</I>, 2008
Gilbert & George, Brits, 2008
Working collaboratively for more than 40 years, Gilbert & George have consistently been at the forefront of British contemporary art. Starting out as "living sculpture" — making "Art for All" — they evolved into fearless "picture"-makers, willing to tackle a broad range of social subjects. Inspired — or traumatized, as they call it — by their own recent retrospective, which traveled to six museums in Europe and the US, the two set to work on a new series of pictures, their largest ever, and are now debuting selections of the 153 unique works from the Jack Freak Pictures in Berlin and Paris.

On view at Berlin's Arndt & Partner through September 18 and Paris' Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac through July 25, the Jack Freak Pictures portray the artists as dancing vaudevillians, robotic avatars, and mutating monsters — all set against a background patterned by the British flag, a map, old medals, and bits of nature and urban life. In a conversation with London's Serpentine Gallery co-director of exhibitions and programs Hans Ulrich Obrist in Berlin, the artists revealed that, after their retrospective, they felt compelled to start all over again. The first picture they made had the Union Jack in it, and they decided to carry that symbol of national identity and subcultural revolt through the rest of the series, pulling every nuance out of it.

"We were amazed, when we finished making the pictures, to realize that we had used so few subjects in them," said George. "The series involves one page from London A-Z, us, medals, and the trees from our backyard. There's very little subject matter, all made in a complex machine of different thoughts, different feelings, different hopes, different fears, different dreads — every aspect of human emotions that lie inside everyone, wherever they live in the world."

Working with black-and-white photographs and computer manipulations of those images, Gilbert & George construct reflections of the world they inhabit in London's East End, a realm that functions as a microcosm for all urban soups where nationhood, tribalism, religion, and humanity interact. They call their pictures the "philosophical equivalents of automatic writing," with each one evolving from an "empty-headed approach." If that's the case, however, we should all just close our eyes and let the world around us come filtering through. It could lead to a greater understanding of who we are, where we are now, and where we're going.

- Paul Laster

View more of Gilbert & George's Jack Freak Pictures in an image gallery at The Daily Beast.
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REVIEW
Miles Aldridge »
Surreal fantasies and acid-colored fashion images
Miles Aldridge, <I>Dance Study #7</I>, 2008
Miles Aldridge, Dance Study #7, 2008
British fashion photographer Miles Aldridge credits luck for the reason he became a photographer. When he pitched photos of his girlfriend to help her become a model for British Vogue, the magazine's editors ended up preferring his talent to her look. That was the mid-1990s, and since then, Aldridge's career has skyrocketed. Working for Vogue Italia, Numero, Paradis, and The New York Times Magazine, he has established himself as an inventive artist with an acute sense of color and impeccable eye for style.

The subject of a recent show at Steven Kasher Gallery in New York, Aldridge has been gathering art-world attention over the past few years, with 2006 and 2008 solo shows at Galerie Alex Daniels-Reflex in Amsterdam and a spring 2009 solo exhibition at Hamiltons in London. His work was also included in New York's International Center of Photography group show Weird Beauty: Fashion Photography Now, which took place earlier this year and featured avant-garde practitioners of the trade.

Aldridge's show at Kasher, Pictures for Photographs, presented an overview of his erotically charged, surreal, cinematic, and pop imagery from the past eight years, along with drawings and sketches in notebooks used to plan the perfectly produced photographs. The exhibition featured a selection of images from his new monograph, published by Edition 7LKarl Lagerfeld's publishing imprint with Steidl. Lagerfeld had a hand in picking the whimsical sketches in the book, while Aldridge and the venerable German art publisher Gerhard Steidl selected the psychologically engaging narrative prints.

The son of celebrated illustrator and graphic designer Alan Aldridge — who's been dubbed "the Man with the Kaleidoscope Eyes" because of his iconic Beatles album covers — Miles has been lucky in both love and art. Married to former supermodel Kristen McMenamy, who occasionally pops up in his pictures, Aldridge is most fortunate to have a vivid imagination, as well as an obsession for detail that delivers the final knockout punch in all of his super-smart imagery.

- Paul Laster

View more of Miles Aldridge's work in an image gallery at The Daily Beast.
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NEWSWIRE
The best in recent art-news coverage
Art sales in London: Battle of the Picasso musketeers (Telegraph)
Two late works by Picasso — paintings of musketeers, made one day apart — are the competing top lots at Christie's and Sotheby's Impressionist and Modern Art sales.

Populist gem joins 'Cloud Gate' at Millennium Park (Chicago Tribune)
Dutch architect Ben van Berkel designs a striking, interactive project for Chicago's premier park.

Art-fraud lawsuit against Louis Vuitton over Murakami prints to go forward (Los Angeles Times)
A collector brings class-action suits against the luxury brand for selling prints made from leftover handbag material.

Banksy vs Bristol Museum, review (Telegraph)
Elusive graffiti artist Banksy creates surprising juxtapositions by remixing a museum's collection with 100 of his works, drawing big crowds.

Prince Charles tears down Mr. Rogers' neighborhood (Wall Street Journal)
Architect Richard Rogers accuses Charles of meddling in democratic affairs after he convinced Qatar's ruler to abandon a London project and hire a more conservative firm, related to the prince.
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