Galerie A.M.180, Prague, November 2016

Review/Thoughts/Narrative by Vaclav Janoscik (Mgr. and Mgr. Ph.D)

From the left:

”Just A Bit On The Side Please”
Satin bed sheet bought in the early 2000’s.
Never used properly.
Synthetic fabric, plastic tubes, string, 60x43x25 cm

”For Your Pleasure”
One of many photos taken as part of an investigation of a homemade garment found in
a thrift store in 2007. The flash was accidentally turned on.
Poster printed in poor quality, 50x70 cm

”Coming”
Porcelain horse acquired in the late 1980’s, broken when moving from place to place, late 2000’s.
Hand-woven carpet in linen.
Porcelain, linen, 10x12x12 cm

”The Way You Move”
From an experiment with pigmented paper in 2012.
A few sheets of pigmented paper were bought in Berlin 2009.
I have never been able to recreate the experiment.
Cotton fabric, pigment, 150x100 cm

”No Wonder”
Fabric bought in London in 2014 to be used as cover for breaking glass bottles.
As I was breaking bottles the splinter of glass ripped the fabric.
Synthetic fabric, holes, 140x45 cm

From the left:

“Fiction, Reality and Dreams”
Text, 5 frames x 21x29.7 cm

”Take It And Run”
My grandmother (fathers side) apparently bought them in Paris. Or so I was told.
They were given to me after she had passed away.
Never used.
Framed feather decoration, paper, 29.7x42 cm

”Just Do It Again”
By-product from a performance with Quiltland in Stockholm, 2013.
The fabric was placed on the floor of the stage in order to protect it from the color I poured on her.
Cotton fabric, pigment, eyelets, rope, 200x200 cm





From the left:

”Just Do It Again”
By-product from a performance with Quiltland in Stockholm, 2013.
The fabric was placed on the floor of the stage in order to protect it from the color I poured on her.
Cotton fabric, pigment, eyelets, rope, 200x200 cm

”Well…”
By-product from a performance with Quiltland in Helsinki, 2013. The fabric was part of the clothes she was wearing as I pored color on her.
Nylon fabric, pigment, metal, stones, dimensions variable 

Stones covered in almost fluorescent moss found in a nearby park to the gallery. Used as anchors for the work “Well…”