|
|
For further details, commissions or purchase of work, please contact Agnes at agnespnavarre@hotmail.co.uk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MllkJohEisg The Royal Geographical Society is situated at the corner of Kensington Gore and Exhibition Road. 1 Kensington Gore, London SW7 2AR
Notes on the Creative Compass show at the Royal Geographical Society, 6 May - 2 July 2010, Monday - Friday, 10.00 - 17.00 free admission 1 - Site specific version of the "Proustian Map of London - Land of Achievement". Themes: celebration of personal achievements, feel good factor, diversity and universality of the human condition, sense of community, geographical inclusion/exclusion, North and South London, local knowledge, positive/negative perception of boroughs and postcodes, trust and validation of my project. Reference to the London Map Shewing the Residencies of the Members of the RGS 1843
Themes: ephemerality and scope of one's career, recognition, validation, opportunities, level of success, gender, categorization, journey from emerging to established, building blocks of an art career on a global scale, fragmentation of the art world, reference to Caroline Bond Day’s anthropological work.
4 - Colour Coding series The Age of Innocence In these colour prints, APN maps out the variations of black and white tones on two toddlers’ faces, labelling them with food terminology. In French, the mother tongue of the artist, a person of mixed black and white racial heritage is defined amongst other things as café au lait. The pleasure derived from tasting, smelling, touching, looking, is lingering in the child's tongue where knowledge is swallowed, inquired, repeated. Racial awareness is taught and given an 'appropriate' label, a great leap into the adult world, at a later stage of language and identity formation. The artist playfully speculates on the terminology the next generation will be using to define their identity.
“ (…) There was a moment when --------- In 2010, The Proustian Map of London - Land of Achievement will be exhibited at the Royal Geographical Society, 1 Kensington Gore, London SW7 2AR.
In 2009, Agnes worked with inIVA on the Creative Mapping project curated by Teresa Cisneros at inIVA. She collaborated with artists Gayle Chong Kwan as well as Teresa Kiyota Rahman de Swiet on two different educational projects, 'Mapping the Creative Process' and 'Pronoic Mapping'. http://creativemapping.blogspot.com/ The London Map Project - "The Knowledge - Land of Achievement & Land of Wisdom" was on show at the Tenderpixel Gallery in Cecil Court, off St Martin's Lane, London between 18th December 2008 and 17th January 2009. Coupling the grammar of cartography with elements from the Proust Questionnaire entitled "The Knowledge : Land of Wisdom & Land of Achievement", Poitevin-Navarre explores notions of identity and expectations. By democratically marking survey responses of people from all walks of life onto a series of London borough maps, the artist highlights emergent patterns of collective wisdom, personal achievements and aspirations. The anonymity of each response to the Proust Questionnaire allows for a more open interpretation; contributors can be true to themselves whilst answering the questions, and the audience is unable to pass judgment based on gender, age, race and creed. “Fathoms”, the site-specific installation that complements the show, encapsulates notions of categorization, social mobility and symbolic transition. The impeccable provenance of this set of Darwinian ladders [from the Natural History Museum] is key. So is the numerical code that suggests the meandering shape of the river that divides our city. Agnes gave an artist talk/Q&A on Saturday 10th January at 3pm at the gallery.
Agnes Poitevin-Navarre performed a Pecha Kucha [20 slides, 20 seconds each] on the subject of 'Motherland' on Monday 28th July 2008. The venue was a French restaurant in Hammersmith. http://www.chezkristof.co.uk/html/#home 'Motherland', a new site-specific installation, was exhibited in Hyde Park, as part of the 'Crystal Palace Reappears' curated by Senaka Weeraman, on Saturday 21st June and Sunday 22nd June 2008. It was also exhibited at Crystal Palace Park, on the beautiful Italian Terraces on Saturday 5th and a rainy Sunday 6th July 2008, as part of the Crystal Palace Park Victorian Weekend. http://www.multimap.com/maps/?hloc=GB|crystal%20palace#map=51.42318,-0.07657|16|4&loc=GB:51.42236:-0.07338:16|crystal%20palace| 'Motherland' is an installation of life-size silhouettes relating to Queen Victoria's nine pregnancies, her iconic figure as the Head of the British Empire and England being the Mother Land. http://www.crystalpalacefoundation.org.uk/Events/ The students from HCC collaborated with Yara El Sherbini and Agnes Poitevin-Navarre on the theme of Mapping Language. An exhibition of their work was shown at inIVA. Private view Thursday 3rd July, 6-8pm. The students from Stoke Newington School collaborated with Jeremy Wood and Agnes Poitevin-Navarre and 'Circle of Friends' as well as a series of GPS drawings were shown at inIVA, Education Space, Rivington Place, London EC2A 3BA, from Wednesday18th June until Saturday 21st. http://www.iniva.org/learning/creative_mapping/young_people_s_projects/personal_cartographies 'Colour Coding Julien & Jasper - The Age of Innocence' was exhibited as part of the group show 'From Taboo to Icon' curated by Sophie Saunders and Shervone Neckles in Philadelphia at the Ice Box Project Space from January 11th, 2008 until February 11th. http://www.cranearts.com/ice_box.html 'Colour Coding Julien & Jasper - The Age of Innocence' were shown at the Mapping show in Bury from April to July 2007 and with the commissioned Also the Hastings maps entitled
Update
on the London Maps Proust questionnaire/The Knowledge - Land of Achievement & Land
of Wisdom I
want to thank all 1000 or so of you who have, so
far, contributed to the project.
Spot
the artist:
Land of Wisdom [ southern detail of the Croydon Map] © agnes poitevin-navarre 2004-2006
The work of Agnes Poitevin-Navarre plays with the concept of self and how it is defined through racial/cultural categorization. In her art practice, she challenges perceptions of cultural, linguistic and racial hybridity. Agnes uses genograms,
maps, blackboards, playing cards, objects in clay, oil paintings, collages
and coffee stained drawings, to load these beautiful, functional, educational
and recreational artefacts with subversive symbolism. The Proust Questionnaire
project however signals a point of departure in her art practice. Agnes
is using a multivocal rather than a personal source to explore identity
issues. One recent contributor said: "You are a reflexion of what
you see in others". By randomly gathering contributions from people
from all walks of life, all ages, ethnicities, social classes, she is
highlighting patterns of collective wisdom.
|
|
|