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  • Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)
    Tate Etc. issue 36: Spring 2016
  • Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)
    Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)
  • Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)
    Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)
  • Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)
    Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)
  • Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)
    Tate Etc. issue 36 (Spring 2016)

Editor’s note

Alexander Melamid and Vitaly Komar first met in a morgue in 1963, drawing anatomy sketches as art students in Moscow. The pair would later go on to collaborate for more than 25 years on countless satirical portraits and installations, forming their own ironic take on pop and conceptual art. Their Superobjects: Supercomfort for Superpeople 1975 project, one part of which features on this issue’s cover, was a mock catalogue for products that might simply look like junk, but were promised to have nearmiraculous, life-improving qualities. When they applied to leave the USSR in 1977, though, only Melamid had as yet been given a permit to emigrate. When asked how the two-man collective might continue to work together, Komar responded drily: ‘We’re going to try telepathy.’

This issue of Tate Etc. intended to focus, more than usual, on the lesser-remarked works in the Tate collection, to shine some light on corners left normally unexplored. But what began to happen was almost telepathic, as connections and links between different sections of the magazine began to appear unbidden. Writers and contributors were looking at the same artists or artworks for very different reasons, and other direct links began to thread their way through our pages, such as those between Victor Pasmore, a member of the brief Objective Abstraction movement, and one of the teachers of Roy Ascott, who in turn later taught Stephen Willats, one of the artists in Tate Britain’s upcoming exhibition Conceptual Art in Britain 1964 - 1979.

But more subtle connections also became apparent. Our extended feature ‘Walking in Unquiet Landscapes’ offers a contemporary reassessment of landscape from a range of writers, poets, musicians and artists, but it also shows how the written word and photography have helped in shaping our experience of landscape. The artists discussed here from both the Performing for the Camera and conceptual art exhibitions provide countless examples exploring this further. Meanwhile, in her essay ‘The Art of Protest’, Nina Power examines how artists globally have worked within and in response to crisis and conflict, but it also highlights how many of the new artistic voices and approaches described in several of our features have arisen from moments of upheaval. What the diverse connections here make clear is that art is integral in simultaneously understanding and creating the world around us.

What has emerged in this issue is a potted, alternative history of the 20th century, tracing the groundwater and hidden currents, where influences and ideas work their way unexpectedly and indirectly. What we can find here are artists involved in both radical social changes and the quieter, slower shifts in our surroundings, creating new forms of communication and synthesis. We may not be telepathic, but what they might be trying to tell us is that the world can be reshaped and inverted with the simplest of gestures.

Chris Fite-Wassilak, guest editor

Contents

Upfront

Wayne Sleep and George Lawson

Wayne Sleep and George Lawson recall the experience of sitting for David Hockney between 1972-5

Constellations at Tate Liverpool
Sacha Waldron

Sacha Waldron charts a course through Tate Liverpool's series of long-term displays of the collection

Head to Head
JJ Charlesworth and Isobel Harbison

Essay

Can artists respond effectively to social and political upheaval?
Nina Power

The Tate Modern display Citizens and States poses a range of possible ways that artists might react to or participate in moments of change. Nina Power takes this as a starting point to look at a further set of global examples of how they are documenting, memorialising and intervening in times of violence and protest

Lisa Le Feuvre

How artists have explored and utilised prosthetic technologies both to satirise humanity and help in the quest to expand the human body beyond its limits

Feature

Performing for the Camera at Tate Modern
Liz Jobey

Photography changed the way we look at ourselves and how we might act in front of a camera. But it also changed the way performance artists could portray and develop their work. The new Tate Modern exhibition Performing for the Camera explores the relationship between the photographic image and performance. Liz Jobey examines how artists have for more than a century documented, delighted and deceived with photography

Robert Macfarlane

Other traditions run through depictions of the British landscape, below and beyond romantic idealisations. Here, Robert Macfarlane traces a history in art of the decidedly strange and eerie face of landscape

Enrico Tassi

Běla Kolářová’s (1923–2010) experiments with photography and assemblage brought the everyday into direct contact with the aesthetic of a new technological age

Toby Heys

AUDINT member Toby Heys explores the background of Ellsworth Kelly’s minimal paintings – and the source of their coded messages

Lubaina Himid and Peter C van Wyck

New reflections on two works in the Tate collection

Poem

A poem by Jack Underwood
Jack Underwood