Showing posts with label James Nares. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Nares. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Event Review - James Nares

In Conversation: James Nares
Saturday, January 28th at the Milwaukee Art Museum
By: Mandy Litwin

Seeing James Nares talk at the Milwaukee Art Museum this past weekend was very enjoyable. He is a multi-media visual artist who especially focuses on film-making. I had gone into the talk not knowing too much about his art. Though it was initially a bit slow getting into it, the way James Nares discussed his work – in sort of a chronological order – ended up making each piece make sense. He seems to have a big fascination with change over time, as well is sort of the human presence in those changes.

The talk was very informative and light hearted as he went through various videos and art works and explained their backgrounds. One of my pieces was Street in which he uses a high speed camera to capture people going about their everyday lives in the streets of New York. Besides being generally visually stimulating, it was interesting to see the tiniest details of the people; facial expressions, motions, and more. Due to the fact that the videos are shown at such a slow speed, you are given the ability to study the figures and make implications about each person.



Another example of his work that shows a sense of change over time are his paintings in which he creates a set of moving lines on a surface that moves continuously on a rotating cylinder. He creates brushes that push paint through them onto the surface as he desires. The motion of the cylinder creates the effect of continuous and winding lines on the piece.


James Nares work is quiet and subtle, but opens a world of fascination and deeper thinking when closely looked at.

Monday, February 6, 2017

Event Review - James Nares: In the City

In Conversation: James Nares

Saturday, January 28, 3:00pm   Lubar Auditorium, Milwaukee Art Museum
in conjunction with  Helen Levitt: In the Street | James Nares: In the City 
January 27 through April 16, 2017


By Rebeka Schmieder

James Nares is a jack of all trades artist. He has sunk is hands into art forms that explore time in different mediums. His work is experimental and expressive. He was born in England and moved to New York to pursue his career as an artist in 1974. Nares work has been exhibited both nationally and internationally. 

He is an inventor because most of works required him to create instruments to achieve his vision. His large scale paintings required him to make his own brushes that created a seamless free-forming stroke across the canvas. His most recent work, Street, is confronting and mesmerizing. This slow-motion video focuses on the small moments in time. In his talk he mentioned that his purpose for making this video was to find those small cracks in time where people put their guard down. 
Street James Nares
What I found in most of his works was Nares interest in how time effects different things. I notice this more in his films than his paintings. I connected with Street because street photography has always been one of my "back burner" interests. When I sat down in the viewing space, I got fully immersed into the film. I saw what would be in real time split seconds, as the cracks in time that Nares was talking about in his lecture. I also enjoyed the music that accompanied the film. This simple guitar acoustics made me think more about individuals in the video. Nares said that movement is music, so he made the choice music based on this notion. I think that when I took street photos I didn't pay attention to so much the little moments, but the overall picture so to speak. There is so much life in the city and to zoom in on the so called cracks in time would give more clarity and meaning to my street photography. 




Sunday, January 29, 2017

Event Review - James Nares Lecture

In Conversation: James Nares

Saturday, January 28, 3:00pm  Lubar Auditorium, Milwaukee Art Museum
in conjunction with  Helen Levitt: In the Street | James Nares: In the City January 27 through April 16, 2017
by Kylee Diedrich




James Nares is a multimedia visual artist.  He was born in London, United Kingdom and went to school for Visual Arts.  He moved to New York City to work as an artist in 1974.  He creates thought provoking and intense works that force the viewer to be uncomfortable, hypnotized and engrossed in the viewing of his work.  His main themes reference movement, rhythms, and repetition. I think he works intuitively and spontaneously while also being precise and conscious of his process. During the talk, Nares discusses a wide scope of his work from when he started out to the most current projects, one called In the City which is showing in the Milwaukee Art Museum. He also has a project named Portraits up in the Paul Kasmin Gallery in New York City, NY. 



From watching his videos he seems to enjoy the balance between physics, art and rhythm. My favorite part of his talk was when he showed called Globe. The video was created in 2007 and is truly hypnotic with the music he chose. I could honestly watch this for hours and never become bored.  I found the video exhibited at the museum interesting, In the City, because he changes how people are viewed and breaks down a barrier between how people want to be seen, and how people are actually seen.  His video, Drip uses changes in sound and speed -- like all of his videos, they are hypnotic.  I feel as though I am in a trance when I view them, everything in the world goes away and I am placed in this other world.