Morag Keil
Details
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.Visual Elements: The artwork features a minimalist, industrial-style space with large arched windows that let in natural light. The room has a clean, white palette with exposed concrete floors and ceiling beams, creating a stark, utilitarian aesthetic. Subject Matter: The artwork appears to be an installation piece, with various objects and materials scattered throughout the space, including a row of magazines or books on the floor, a toy house-like structure, and what seems to be audio equipment or other technological devices. Artistic Style and Technique: The installation adopts a conceptual, mixed-media approach, blending found objects, audio elements, and architectural features to create a thought-provoking and immersive experience for the viewer. Context: The artwork likely explores themes of modern technology, consumerism, and the role of art in a rapidly evolving, media-saturated world, reflecting the artist's commentary on the changing landscape of contemporary culture. ...
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Morag Keil
1985 , BritishMorag Keil’s practice is ouroboric: self-referring, self-erasing, self-consuming, regurgitating. Keil’s installations have the bald efficiency of something bargain-bucket but workable. This amateurish construction — of clunky paper-mâché houses downtrodden with office heels, of a low-fi camera’s glitchy rove over motorbikes — actualises her reflection of contemporaneity’s squashing and conditioning of subjectivity, as well as the interlocking of production and pleasure. Beneath the watermark of professionalism and propriety lies a cesspit of personal contradictions and anxiety-trimmed mediations. Through a wide variety of mediums including painting, photography, sculpture, installation and video, as well as collaborative projects with artists such as Georgie Nettell, Keil’s work often relieve the aestheticising cliché of the post-financial crash and millennial precarity. In her gallery exhibition, Here We Go Again, the artist simulated in three dimensions an out of date video game mocking home automation: doors with peepholes open up to doors, walls painted in soft pink and green screen, and televisions playing a lush forest CGI animation from a BBC One ident, which then cut to a blue circle that wobbled as a voice-over asked in the half-droning tones of Amazon’s virtual assistant, Alexa. Behind Keil’s work is the demand to know why we live like this and the impulse to tear it all down; but, until that happens, we wander. ...
Morag Keil: Artworks
Project Native Informant
LondonContemporary art gallery established in 2013 with a strong interest in expanded institutional critique. Project Native Informant works with 16 artists and collectives, producing 5-6 exhibitions per year and hosting performances, concerts, talks and events.