terça-feira, 24 de janeiro de 2012

One and Other




Antony Gormley at the opening of One & Other.
The temporary plaque attached to the plinth.
16.00 to 17.00 on 17 July 2009: Karen Ogilvie flying paper kites and distributing hundreds of sweets all with written advice such as "Be friendly to a stranger today"
One & Other was a public art project by Antony Gormley, in which 2,400 members of the public occupied the usually vacant fourth plinth inTrafalgar Square, London, for an hour each for 100 days. The project began at 9am on Monday 6 July 2009, and ran until 14 October. The first person to officially occupy the plinth was Rachel Wardell from Lincolnshire.[1] A documentary art book by Gormley, entitled One and Other, was published in the UK by Jonathan Cape on 14 October 2010. The Wellcome Trust has posted online at its website its series of oral-history interviews of the 2400 plinthers.

Contents

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[edit]Opening

The project was opened by the Mayor of LondonBoris Johnson. Minutes before the official launch Stuart Holmes, an anti-smoking protester, managed to clamber onto the plinth and displayed a banner calling for a ban on tobacco. Gormley urged him to do the "gentlemanly thing" and give up his place to the first official "plinther", Rachel Wardell. He did so and descended in the cherry picker used to carry participants to and from the plinth.[2][3]

[edit]Participants

Members of the public could apply for an hour on the plinth via the project's website. Gormley himself applied but didn't get a place.[4]Reviewing the event afterwards, the Guardian's top ten "plinthers"[5] were:
NamePerformance
Gerald ChongDemolished a cardboard replica of the London skyline, dressed as Godzilla.
Amanda HallConstructed a full-size Gormley-style human figure from bread products.
Ollie CampbellPitched a tent, from which a live chicken and two blow-up dolls emerged.
Steve Cousins (The Balloonatic)[6]Performed in a red catsuit with a large, red balloon.
Sam MartinDressed as a football referee, Martin challenged members of the public and announced half-time.
Jonathan May-Bowles (Jonnie Marbles)[7]Invited members of the public to text their secrets to him, which were then read aloud.
Neil StuddDressed as a living statue of Lord Nelson, in an echo of Nelson's Column.
Liz CrowSat in a wheelchair wearing a Nazi military uniform, as a political statement on the rights of disabled people.
Susanna Meese-SimpsonPosed naked as if for a life study.
Paul SpellerPerformed a succession of scientific experiments submitted by the public, including an experiment with a tin can telephone.
On 14 July at 8.00pm, poet R. N. Taber read a selection of his poems, while photographer Alex Boyd collaborated with Scottish Makar (Poet Laureate) Edwin Morgan for his time on the plinth.[8] On 12 August at 1am, a naked plinther was asked to cover up by the police.[9]
Streamed live online by SkyArts, the exhibit quickly developed a cadre of regular Twitter followers who provided a running commentary of events on the plinth.

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