Logo: Nought to Sixty

Institute of Contemporary Arts

Nought to Sixty: Artists and Projects

A cumulative lists of all artists and projects involved in Nought to Sixty.

 

About Nought to Sixty

Nought to Sixty presents sixty projects by emerging artists based in Britain and Ireland over six months from 5 May to 2 November 2008.

 

Most of the artists in Nought to Sixty are under thirty-five, few of them have had significant commercial exposure, and in most cases this is their first opportunity to mount a solo project in a major public space.

 

The season is not intended to announce any new generation or style, but to build up a multifaceted portrait of the emerging art scene in the two countries, and to provide a space for exchange.

 

The Nought to Sixty programme consists of:

 

 

Events happen at the ICA every Monday night:

 

 

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Nought to Sixty is supported by:

Arts Council England logo
Scottish Arts Council logo
Henry Moore Foundation logo
Culture Ireland logo

 

Other partners:

Kirin Ichiban logo
Art Review logo
Afterall logo
Lux logo

Maria Fusco

Maria Fusco, The Happy Hypocrite Issue 1, 2008.
Maria Fusco, The Happy Hypocrite Issue 1, 2008.

Fusco is a writer, as well as the editor of The Happy Hypocrite journal.

Maria Fusco is in the Nash and Brandon Rooms on Monday 15 September at 8pm

Maria Fusco (born Belfast, 1972, lives in London) interrogates the phenomenon of writing about art, writing about writing and art about writing, but primarily she is interested in is what she describes as “writing with art”. In her roles as art critic, editor, lecturer, fiction writer and Director of Writing at Goldsmiths College, Fusco has searched out diverse styles of writing, not simply for their literary value but as part of an ongoing fascination with the slippery nature of writing, and its intimate relationship to contemporary art practice.

With The Happy Hypocrite, launched in spring 2008, Fusco has generated a periodical that nods to the history of avant-garde writing, reproducing the pages of seminal publications, such as the experimental journal Bananas, within each issue. The Happy Hypocrite is also committed to new forms of experimental writing, and central to its remit is Fusco's desire to make the journal a triangular conversation between writer, subject and reader. Taking its title from a Max Beerbohm's short story, the publication began as a book, but soon outgrew this format, transforming instead into a bi-annual journal. The Happy Hypocrite is published by Bookworks, and to date has featured contributions from artists such as Gerard Byrne, Cosey Fanni Tutti and Farhad Ahrahnia. The Happy Hypocrite is also the focus of a discussion which forms one of the artist's contributions to Nought to Sixty. Drawing on Fusco's wide-ranging interests in fiction, analysis, criticism and conversation, the event is also accompanied by a special screening of the Maysles Brothers' Meet Marlon Brando (1965), a film that has influenced Fusco's understanding of oral culture and literacy. The short portrait – in part created by Albert Maysles, who went on to shoot the seminal documentary Grey Gardens (1976) – candidly shows Brando toying with the format of the Hollywood interview, while on a press junket for the film Morituri (1966). Sitting in his New York hotel room, the film star deftly dodges the journalists' often banal questions and exposes their fawning attitudes.

In addition to the latter event, however, Fusco is also presenting a longer work, one that begins in September and continues to the end of Nought to Sixty. Expanding on a previous piece, Doom Knots (2006), the artist is generating a barrage of texts that will be broadcast daily, by Bluetooth, to mobile phones passing within range of her transmitter. The piece, which is based at the ICA, is characterised by a fragmentation of narrative, and it would be very hard for any one individual to experience the entirety of this work. However, its engagement with narrative as a physical but metamorphic object is typical of Fusco – and one of the things has lent her work to an art context.

Isla Leaver-Yap

For Nought to Sixty Fusco has developed SPUME, a series of texts that are broadcast daily, via Bluetooth, to the mobile phones of ICA visitors. Texts are changed each week until the end of Nought to Sixty. Read the archive of texts.

Nought to Sixty in Pictures: Maria Fusco

Photo: Maria Fusco at the ICA Photo: Maria Fusco at the ICA Photo: Maria Fusco at the ICA Photo: Maria Fusco at the ICA Photo: Maria Fusco at the ICA Photo: Maria Fusco at the ICA Photo: Maria Fusco at the ICA

Essays

Not about institutions, but why we are so unsure of them, by J.J. Charlesworth.

Why an institution of contemporary art(s) like this, and not any other?

Gazetteer

Artist-run spaces and organisations (England, not London)

Artist-led organisations that support networks of emerging art in England outside London.

Coverage

Nought to Sixty in pictures

Babak Ghazi, Model, 2008, Digital prints on canvas, Courtesy the artist. Installation shot at the ICA, 2008, Photo: Stephen White

Photos of the projects, artists and audiences taking part in Nought to Sixty.

Coverage

Salon Discussions

Nought to Sixty includes a series of monthly discussions that address the networks that form and contribute to an emerging scene.

The ICA is located on The Mall, London SW1Y 5AH. Box Office: 020 7930 3647 / Switchboard: 020 7930 0493

 

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