BASEL.- Von Bartha, Basel is presenting a new immersive exhibition from British artist Bob & Roberta Smith, running from February 3 March 24, 2018. Titled THE WHOLE WORLD IS AN ART SCHOOL! , the show transforms the gallery space into an art school and visitors into art students, asking them to confront the motives behind artistic practice and celebrate the often nonsensical purposeless of the inspiration-finding process.
New works include artistic propositions and provocations designed as calls to action, instructing visitors to take part in several creative activities within the gallery space; these include making pink on pink or grey paintings, build your own blob and painting with both hands. With artist tools, media and workspace provided by the gallery, including new benches painted with slogans by the artist, the exhibition is an organic, creative space that develops over time. Bob & Robertas own attempts at these challenges, as well as those created by visitors during the exhibitions run, will be on display at the gallery.
Bob & Roberta Smiths campaigns are extensions of his artistic practice. Also on display at von Bartha are a variety of brightly-colored text-based slogan works which deal specifically with the role of art in wider society, and brought together here for the first time. A seminal piece This artist is deeply dangerous (2009), details verbatim an experimental art review included in The Guardian newspaper in 2008. Written by the papers tennis correspondent who had swapped places with their art critic for the day the 9 part painting, measuring over 12 metres high, describes the sports writers experience encountering the work of Louise Bourgeois. The piece encapsulates the artists interest in broadening the parameters of art.
Also on exhibition at von Bartha are Bob & Roberta Smiths shorter slogan-based works created on pieces of discarded wood. Working in an improvised way, the artist adapts his handwriting to reflect his message - the ever changing font reflective of the individuality of creation. At once comedic and pointedly political, they depict phrases such as Make Art Not War and All Schools Should Be Art Schools. Some are painted on found doors, with their upbeat, affirming slogans representing literal entry points; the artist suggests that in the embracing of these ideas, we can find entryways to alternative futures.
Patrick Brill aka Bob & Roberta Smith (born 1963) is a British contemporary artist, a Royal Academician, writer, musician and art education advocate, who sees art as an important element in democratic life. His work encourages people to engage with art and to look beyond the aesthetic surface, with pieces including Make Art Not War (1997) which belongs to the Tate collection and Letter to Michael Gove (2011), a letter to the now former UK Secretary of State for Education reprimanding him for the destruction of Britains ability to draw, design and sing. He is also an associate professor at Sir John Cass Department of Art at London Metropolitan University and initiated the Arts Party Conference in 2013, where artists and organisations came together to debate the role of arts within the education system. Recent exhibitions include This is a Freedom of Expression Centre, for Hull City of Culture (2017); All Schools Should be Art Schools, for Yorkshire Sculpture Park (2017) and Folkestone is an Art School, for Folkestone Triennial (2017). Other exhibitions include Art Amnesty, MoMA PS1, NY (2014), Help Build The Ruins of Democracy, BALTIC, Gateshead (2004) and The Mobile Reality Creator, Compton Verney, Warwickshire (2003)