Showing posts with label The Walker Art Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Walker Art Center. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

In review: 2010 British Advertising Awards

by Jahna Peloquin

The Walker Art Center's screening of the British Advertising Awards - lovingly nicknamed the Brits - has been an unusual holiday tradition for me and my mother for years. (She has a particular interest in the awards, having worked as an advertising and graphic design instructor for a couple of decades.)



But the ongoing sell-out status of the show indicates there's something more pervasive and accessible about it for its fans, advertising background or not. The commercials are alternatively lighthearted, entertaining bits showcasing cheeky, droll British humor, and expansive, technologically impressive productions nearing short-film length. And like last year, many of the ads presented disturbing cautionary tales. Ads showcased this year depict a backseat rape, a kitchen beating, a stabbing in the groin, and polar bear corpses raining down upon a city.

It's easy to see the impact of the economic recession on the winning commercials. Many of them featured the various transit and media holdings of Virgin, hinting at a lack of competition. Another mobile phone company, T-Mobile, had the grand prize-winning commercial that centered around a tired and unnecessarily extensive use of the flash mob. It lacked the punch of past year's winners, to say the least.

On the upside, many commercials made due with limited budgets with smart yet simple concepts. One featured a retro ad of a classic couple at Christmastime, with actors' hands poking through cardboard cutouts enacting various scenarios poking kitschy fun at the immovability of the scene. ("Darling come closer!" "I cant'!") Others featured cute kids being, well, cute.



Though this year's presentation is nowhere near the peak that it hit a few years back when the economy seemed healthy, it was a welcome reprieve after last year's overwhelmingly depressing content (Britain's knife crime epidemic and drunk driving public service announcements) - not to mention the fact that many of the commercials were funded publicly. The tenacity and increasingly sophisticated technology on display shows the advertising industry leaving off 2010 on a slightly more optimistic note.

Remaining screenings for December 30 and January 2 are sold out, though you may be able to snag scalped/Craigslisted tix. Walker Art Center, 1750 Hennepin Ave., Minneapolis, 612-375-7600, www.walkerart.org.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

The Festival of Appropriation: CALL FOR ARTISTS

@ The Soap Factory/Walker Art Center/mnartists.org

Entry Deadline: Monday, August 20, 2007

This two week event in November 2007 will bring together collage, assemblage and mixed media artists, working with two and three dimensional visual collage and assemblage, along with works of audio and video collage, to celebrate the art of appropriation. The event will feature an exhibition at The Soap Factory and a film screening at The Walker Art Center. Participating artists will also be included in a special curated section at the mnartists site, with potential to be highlighted in November's access+ENGAGE newsletter focusing on the art of appropriation.

Appropriation is an important historical practice in art-making, in which the artist uses a previously existing form, image or sound in new ways. The creative effort is defined by the inspired selection and manipulation of found materials. The end result is a strangely familiar, yet altogether new creation.

We are looking for innovative and interesting work by Minnesota artists for this year’s Festival Of Appropriation.

A competitive selection process will be conducted by a team of creator/curators. Selected Festival works will be featured in a two week exhibition at the Soap Factory, and film screening at The Walker Art Center.

For consideration, works must be on display at mnartists.org. The curators will utilize this website exclusively in their search for Minnesota collage artists. It’s free to set up a page at mnartists.org, if you haven’t already. Just click the “Join / Subscribe” button near the top of the main page. If you need help, visit the “Help / Info” page, also linked to from the main page at mnartists.org.

To submit your work for this year’s exhibition, once you’ve established an mnartists page for yourself, just send an email to the address below, including the URL for your artist’s page at mnartists.org. There is no entry fee to submit work.

The Festival of Appropriation, presented by mnartists.org, will open Friday, November 2nd at The Soap Factory and is curated by Some Assembly Required's Jonathan Nelson and l'etoile magazine's Kate Iverson.

Please direct questions to: kate@letoilemagazine.com

For more info about the Festival of Appropriation:
www.festivalofappropriation.org