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:

 

 

Join the Nought to Sixty list

Sign up for regular updates about the Nought to Sixty and the rest of the ICA's programme, special events and offers. It's free.

 

 

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

Stephen Connolly

Stephen Connolly, Great American Desert, 2008, film
Stephen Connolly, Great American Desert, 2008, film

Connolly is an artist filmmaker whose work adopts the investigatory and archival conventions of documentary.

Stephen Connolly's event is in Cinema 1 on 18 August.

Some of the strongest cultural responses to the shifts in the political and social landscape that followed 9/11 have come through film, and particularly through the mode of documentary. Stephen Connolly (born Montreal, 1964, lives in London) is an artist-filmmaker who employs the investigative and reconstructive aspects of documentary, exploring how its formal conditions can reflect on both individual and social agency.

Shown at film festivals as well as in gallery contexts, Connolly's work uses various practices associated with conceptual film, including atemporality and montage, while always emphasising a central motif or subject. The artist does not foreground his own presence, but employs a multitude of voices and modes that include direct commentary, reportage and reconstructed speech.

Connolly's Film for Tom (2005) attempts to piece together elements of a deceased friend's life. It is a portrait, yet one that is necessarily fragmented - in response to a personality that was not straightforward, and that was not comfortable within 'conventional' society. The artist's own audio recordings of Tom, conversing on politics and on his place in the world, are coupled with images and sounds that operate as traces of the man: an answer-phone message from his old school, reporting an entry in the school records; images from an archive of his photographs. Film for Tom is a searing and poignant act of remembrance, but also a rounded expression of the difficulty of understanding an individual's position in the world.

Connolly's earlier film The Whale (2003) is described by the artist as "an oblique meditation on safety, fear and notions of faraway places". Here the fleeting image and voice of Ulrike Meinhof, who was one of the leading members of Germany's Red Army Faction, is intertwined with footage of people in an urban park and of a walk through Cairo's City of the Dead. A dialogue between mother and child unites these disparate elements.

In Connolly's hands the documentary is a nonjudgmental form, un-dogmatic about its status as historical document or mode of investigation. Great American Desert (2008) moves from contemporary footage of recreational vehicles in the Arizona desert, to images of a re-staging of the Hiroshima bomb as propagandistic entertainment within the Los Angeles Coliseum in 1945. Through a mode of filmmaking rooted in the personal and quotidian, Connolly highlights the origins of our culture of spectacle and leisure - a culture that can obfuscate both history and truth.

Connolly's Nought to Sixty presentation includes screenings of The Whale and Great American Desert, along with a discussion relating to a third work, currently in production, that will join them to form the final part of a series entitled Afflicted States. The artist embarked upon this group of works in 2001, and it is at once a response to global events and an extension of his exploration - also evident in Film for Tom - of individual subjectivity and of the individual's relationship to society and the state.

The two existing works combine archive footage, textual quotations, interviews and semi-scripted recordings, drawing links between nature, our relationship with space and the restrictions on liberty that have unfolded in the twenty-first century.

Richard Birkett

Nought to Sixty in pictures: Stephen Connolly

Photo: Stephen Connolly Photo: Stephen Connolly Photo: Stephen Connolly Photo: Stephen Connolly Photo: Stephen Connolly

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

 

Entry to exhibitions, café and bar is free.

 

Open Monday 12pm-11pm, Tues-Sat 12pm-1am, Sunday 12pm-10.30pm
Galleries open daily 12pm - 7pm (9pm on Thursdays) during exhibitions.
Bookshop open 12pm-9pm daily (entry free). Call 020 7766 1452 for bookshop queries.

 

Box office open daily 12pm - 9.15pm. Buy tickets online/call 020 7930 3647 during opening hours. Textphone: 020 7839 0737

 

The Institute of Contemporary Arts is a registered charity in England No 236848 and a Limited Company registered in England No 444351. Registered offices as above. VAT No 853 7217 17

 

Copyright ©2008 Institute of Contemporary Arts, all rights reserved. Site content copyright of their respective owners.