•  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
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Current Exhibition

SELECTED WORKS BY Conrad Shawcross

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Conrad Shawcross
Light Perpeptual I

2004

mixed media

225 x 300 x 250
Housed in a giant cage like a wild, unpredictable experiment, The End of the Particular (Perpetual Light I) has an inherent sense of danger; the laboratory result of Conrad Shawcross’s anorak enthusiasm for science.
Comprised of an articulated arm, with a single light bulb at the end it rotates at a speed of 200rpm, creating a ‘magical’ hovering shape. It’s Conrad Shawcross’s larger than life diagram of String Theory, the floating illusion descriptive of the concept that matter is actually made up of continuous loops of energy, not individual particles.
The blinding light line fluctuates at the precise degrees of a harmonic octave, like the graphic ‘waves’ seen on the visual output monitor of a stereo.
Displayed in a darkened gallery, the device works as a giant drawing machine, blasting it’s luminous patterns through the wire grid onto the walls, leaving the viewer seeing spots, like from staring into the sun. Conrad Shawcross isn’t making paintings on canvas, but rather through mechanical invention, he’s imprinting his image directly into the eye.
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Conrad Shawcross
The Nervous System

2003

mixed media including oak, motor & cord

Dimensions variable
Take an impossible machine design by Rube Goldberg, a contraption built by Heath Robinson, and cross it with a junk sculpture by Jean Tinguely, and you might get something a bit like Conrad Shawcross’s The Nervous System. Ridiculously mammoth, and perilously rickety, Shawcross’s monstrous structure is a testament to Luddite technology.
Handcrafted from oak timber, pieced together like a giant Meccano™ set, The Nervous System is a serious feat of amateur engineering. Mesmerising in its simplistic complexity, Shawcross’s sculpture offers a certain mysticism through making: beyond experiencing this sculpture as an object (with all its creaking noise and grinding movement), it is also a working spinning machine.
His improbable system of cogs and pulleys constantly churn out a perfectly woven rope. Beyond being an installation in itself, The Nervous System is also an artwork that makes art: the colourful cord pours out of the machine like paint, piling on the floor like an ever-expanding abstract sculpture.
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Conrad Shawcross
Harmonic Spectrum 3:2

2005

Pencil on paper

329.3 x 122 cm
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Conrad Shawcross
Harmonic Spectrum 4:3

2005

Pencil on paper

329.3 x 122 cm
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Conrad Shawcross
Harmonic Spectrum 5:3

2005

Pencil on paper

329.3 x 122 cm
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Conrad Shawcross
Harmonic Spectrum 5:4

2005

Pencil on paper

329.3 x 122 cm
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Conrad Shawcross
Harmonic Spectrum 9:8

2005

Pencil on paper

329.3 x 122 cm

ARTICLES

INTERVIEW WITH CONRAD SHAWCORSS

Interviewers: Sarah Campbell, Ruth Downie, Emily Marsden and Pete Betts

Why are you an artist and not an inventor or an engineer?
I would be a terrible inventor. My machines don't do anything, although they do have the guise of being quite functional. And while they look rational and constructed and as if they have some kind of practical purpose, they don't actually. They are often quite metaphysical. They don't have any practical application in terms of the norms of society. I'm approaching and am interested in systems from an artistic point of view, so I have come up with this way of working through artistic, philosophical and conceptual interests, rather than trying to find a machine that makes something or makes money. It is more a philosophical angle.
I really like them as unfinished objects. The minute they turn, you are left in a much easier position of 'ok, that's about a spinning light bulb'. But before they operate, you have to be more aggressively thoughtful to try and work out what they are for.

Do you see your works as educational?
Yes, definitely. There is a huge amount of information that I want to get across. They are very much about philosophy and epistemology. I like the strength of conversation that comes from them and that's the sort of work I go for. I like the possibilities of what they could mean to people. The less breadth that something has, then the less conceptual it is. It's about the potential for ideas, and not necessarily my ideas but the ideas that the viewer has.

Do you think that people need an understanding of science or art to come to an understanding of your work?
No. I think with my pieces, visually there is a lot going on and they have quite a high aesthetic impact. Whoever comes into the room can't help but have those kinds of immediate experiences with the work.

Read the entire article here
Source: www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk

Conrad Shawcross: The Steady States

This winter, the Walker Art Gallery will be presenting a major solo exhibition by artist Conrad Shawcross. The exhibition, which runs from 26th November '05 to 26th February '06 will contain new, specially commissioned, sculptures
2005 is Einstein Year, a celebration of the scientist who changed the way we view our world. In 'Conrad Shawcross: The Steady States,' science is fused with art in three new pieces that draw upon cosmology, quantum mechanics and musical theory to form a fascinating sensory experience.
One of the sculptures, Space Trumpet, was inspired by a trip the artist made to see the microwave radio telescope in New Jersey. In 1963, this telescope had inadvertently picked up the microwave “background noise” coming uniformly from all directions in space, left over from the birth of the Universe. This was the first time that sound and radio waves, rather than light, were used to explore and map out the universe. Its findings gave great credit to the Big Bang theory.

Read the entire article here
Source: bbc.co.uk