Threee
2015 - ongoing
Installation / mixed media archive in triplicate
Dimensions variable

Exhibited at St John's market. The work is a triptych and it encompasses a few of my interests; namely collecting, investigating, cycles and repetitions. The work is made up of three sets of the same things collected since being in Liverpool. The work is capable of adjusting to its environment and this particular installation consists of video, audio, books, found objects, unopened letters and cheeseburgers. The title plays on an otherwise logic which suggests that the spelling of a word should reflect its meaning - and here the letter 'e' shouldn't only appear twice.



re:rereadings
2017
Video, string, folded table, tape, sculpture
Dimensions variable, video 7min

Exhibited at St Georges Hall. This installation grapples with notions of (psychological) projection as well as embracing this idea of 'expanded cinema'. In this experiment it is as if the projection emerges out of the sculpture on the floor. The title eludes to the potential that thinking twice, maybe even thrice, is called for.



Trafalgar Square, Saturday 21 January 2017
2017
Video
3:04 min

Exhibited at the ERL. Filmed at the momentous Woman's March in London I surveyed the crowd. Together with the camera I was the panopticon; the unedited footage reveals portraits of individuals, moments of camaraderie and glimmers of hope. Much like the unedited raw footage the title is straightforward; I respected the event and felt that any playing around was both unnecessary and potentially distracting.



Looking for you in untidy places 
2016
Dual video projection with independent audio
7sec, 5sec and 32sec

Exhibited at LJMU. Having documented this panhandler on Bold Street I reviewed the footage and considered what it was he was seeking. In reality he was keeping a lookout for patrons but back in the studio he seemed to be looking for more. Perhaps he was trying to find himself?



Rememories
2016
Installation; seven videos plus objects
Dimensions variable

Exhibited at MAKE. This installation was immersive; not only were the surfaces enlivened with footage but also the corners were cluttered with hundreds of used NOS canisters (popular cheap narcotic agent) retrieved from the streets of L'pool over 18 months. The videos are a mix of old and new clips, from both here and back in South Africa, and I was keen to see my past and present in conversation.

























Teaching Teachers 
2016 - ongoing
Drawing on paper / participatory action
Dimensions variable

This action is carried out spontaneously in any location. I have been using this drawing technology of mine to engage with people. Thus far I have had over 100 interactions with strangers, colleagues, tutors and friends. Through this not only am I attempting to undermine the myth that drawing is difficult and to democratise this relatively unique technique, but I am also attempting to create a space of common ground in which we all walk away being on top.



Sunbathing on the banks of the Styx 
2016
Video
1:47min

Exhibited at MAKE. I pass this location daily on route to school and I can only assume that a car collided with this traffic light. Initially I considered if this accident had shifted the planet off its axis, then I became aware of my pausing here and not being frustrated. Usually we are impatient in these situations but I wondered if these moments, where we are forced to stop, were in fact a gift - an opportunity to contemplate.

























Itinerant Studio 
2011 - ongoing
Mixed media installation / performance
Dimensions variable

Exhibited at ERC. One of the pillars of my practice is to 'be prepared' and this has led me to having a toolbox of sorts; both in terms of works that can reappear in different conversations as well as the physical components that enable fluid working. To this end I have a folding table and lock boxes that enable me to setup studio anytime and anywhere. I also see this as a philosophical attitude made concrete. This generative installation is in constant flux.






























Working with Obstacles 
2010 - ongoing
Mixed media on paper / performance
Dimensions variable

This particular version was made in the ERC, numerous other versions have be done over the past few years. Essentially I came up with this exercise in order to preoccupy my body and free up my mind. Albeit that the drawings are attractive they are mere byproducts. Subsequently I have invited others to participate.

ARTIST STATEMENT

To Whom It May Concern:

 Currently I am completing my Masters degree - under the tutelage of Imogen Stidworthy, Rosalind Nashashibi, Chris Evans, Bedwyr Williams and a few other smart fuckers - in Fine Art at Liverpool John Moores University. I have been invigorated (and unsettled, and confused, and challenged) by the experience. I am grateful that so many of my darlings have been killed off; making way and making space for an unpredictable and exciting future.
And having spent the past 20 years embracing a frankly wayward, albeit productive, path I have enjoyed and embraced being enrolled, being taught a lesson and being ‘on course’.

I had spent over a decade working with others, primarily in Johannesburg and Cape Town - in a series of intense collaborative learning exercises of my own making - before going solo some years ago. Through this I came to know the value of what can come from relinquishing myself to the relationship knowing that our combination would conjure up a third voice; this peculiar voice that whispers unnecessary solutions.
And aside from learning how to make and represent things I have been privy to diverse conceptual practices that have enabled me to tackle life from a nonjudgmental, paraconsistent, non-binary stance.

You could say that I now operate in the territory of 'expanded cinema'. For me this means that my cinema (read projection / motion picture) is accompanied by things and stuff as well as the environment playing a role - basically an installation of sorts. This term seems apt; it accommodates not only my video work but also things, performances and texts.

I ask myself if the Artist can play the role of truth-teller and be an example of being human? Should the Artist - who according to Cameroonian philosopher Achille Mbembe enjoys "special rights" - take on as he puts it "the task to translate society back to itself"?

I suggest we all pluck something from Roland Barthes: the notion of a 'third meaning', and use this as a way of looking at things from an "obtuse" angle. To be clear he brings in the 'third meaning' as a potential way of seeking meaning beyond the informational and symbolic.
He attempts to define this third level as follows - "As for the other meaning, the third, the one 'too many', the supplement that my intellection cannot succeed in absorbing, at once persistent and fleeting, smooth and elusive, I propose to call it 'the obtuse meaning'. The word springs readily to mind and, miracle, when its etymology is unfolded, it already provides us with a theory of the supplementary meaning. 'Obtusus means that which is blunter , rounded in form'" he goes on to say that we can "Take away the obtuse meaning and communication and signification still remain, still circulate, still come through: without it, I can still state and read". Roland adds that "the obtuse meaning can be seen as an accent, the very form of an emergence, of a fold (a crease even) marking the heavy layer of informations and significations. If it could be described (a contradiction in terms), it would have exactly the nature of the Japanese haiku - anaphoric gesture without significant content, a sort of gash rased [sic?] of meaning (of desire for meaning)."
The very nature of his proposal of a third meaning attracts my attention. It is no less slippery than his notion of the Neutral for him to pin down and it is this 'openness' that makes it so apt a tool for focusing one’s attention and finding seeds for thought.

For me, working through art is a way and a place to interrogate and reveal the notion of Truth. It is not only about hard facts but also the poetry of time, life, death, transformation, desire, rebellion, freedom and conscious and unconscious choice. Remembering that even the Truth can be erratic. My work encourages me to be not merely innovative and build on what exists but to improvise and be inventive and to be available when uncalled-for newness appears.

Rather that being distressed by the state of affairs I have embraced the unsettling energy and am driven to investigate, experiment and ultimately share my findings about the world we live in.
And I do share my findings in the form of Art. In another place I may be called something other than an artist, perhaps a surveillance officer with an inbox and an outbox. That said, I am what I am and seek no permission or authorisation to do what I do. My rule is simple - stay awake, keep your eyes open, take note, think things through and publish (as in make public - anything from having a conversation or an exhibition or literally publishing a book). I thank Art - not 'thank god' or 'thank fuck' - for helping me help myself and in turn (hopefully) help others find some clarity, resolution and reasons to move about.

Albeit that I encourage others to use my work to help trigger thinking about their own concerns I do have concerns of my own: the mental health of society (as in everyone attaining an agility in tackling life in a non-binary way), the ecology of time (specifically how we spend our time) and the role that culture plays in thinking for us all (not only in the sense that we rely partly on culture to inform us but also what kind of thinking does it encourage - one may assume that it is creativity but it is also the place that dogmas are propagated).

Fortunately works of art are expected to say what they have to say and also accommodate multiple interpretations. I can only assume that what I share inspires others to unfold and open up. If not, it is at least a series of examples of mindful artistic experimentation, and proof that one needs neither deadlines nor a belief system to be doing your thing.

Looking forward…

                  











Christian Nerf





This is the 3rd section of this site.

It is a body of material related to my work [praxis?] - contextual material related to works I've made and/or my practice [praxis?] more broadly, i.e. research material, artistic references or references to other related fields, texts, social/political/cultural refs.,. etc - stuff close to my work [praxis?], informing it, helping me develop it.







...

Interim notes - towards a conclusion (2016-2017)

Note 47.55 [Under the influence]     

I was recently reminded about Mark Wallinger’s Royal Ascot in which he uses footage of the Queen repeating her actions on consecutive days. Wonderful work, it echoes with some of my experiments.

To be frank, artless even, I am not that interested in art, or even Art. Comparatively to other people I am very interested but compared to my other interests it's not in my top ten.

I am interested in life. Life! And Death and the decisions that are made along the way that define a life. A life lived versus a life spent. So, I do go see exhibitions as often as possible and I have enjoyed a few over the past several months and some have been reminders…

Edward Krasiński’s show at Tate L'Pool was a good reminder that a body of work is exactly that - a body, dismembered even.

Also at this same Tate outpost I was taken by some paintings by Yves Klein  a series of basically identical blue monochromes, thing is each was originally sold for a different price - a game subsequently played out by several other Artists - and seeing them now reunited they were all framed differently (some were modestly framed and others encased in bulletproof glass) indicating the different lives they had lived since leaving his hands.

Another memorable sound and light installation was at Tate London - Philippe Parreno's "Anywhen". He states that "the exhibition is a construction of situations or sequences in a non-linear narrative" in addition he 'combines aspects of chance and control: the sequences of events are triggered by software which is informed by micro-organisms.' An enjoyable, thought provoking and playful accomplishment.

Anselm Kiefer lining the walls of White Cube's Bermondsey space with lead was potent. Literal heaviness. Thumbs up to Walhalla.

Our Rory's Passive Aggressive Collaborative Systems performance at Surtsey L’Pool was fresh and temporal – neat and messy. A few simple devices transforming an average space into an energised zone.

Being exposed to the Serving Library and their ongoing endeavour has been reassuring - ongoing projects have the potential to grow and regrow and pollinate, if not self inseminate.

There have been more than a few notable events, talks and a bunch of thought provoking things compliments of the Liverpool Biennial – I will be adding some more instances at a later date.

Note 47.74 [One thing leads to another]     I have just presented my latest installation "re:rereadings". Not displeased with this iteration, I worked in the space for a week which allowed for multiple occasions of unfolding and refolding in situ and I got to think everything through until I learnt to embrace even the unstraight lines and made the unworkable work.

For me this is a key work and it is teetering between my past and my future. The elements that I have used - a projection (of 'nothing'), an object (containing 'nothings'), the 'key-lines', the subtle soundscape and my table (folded, paused) - came from a toolbox of many things. And they were just enough.

This sketch came out of the experimental installations I developed at our Make residency (image pending), which evolved out of my installation with Trasi Henen at Surtsey (image below) which was an offshoot of my containers (image above) investigation. All these experiments are notable, and I see my next work following on from here.

Note 47.63 [Oscillationism]     My works, and the way I choose to exhibit them, have been oscillating. Mind you, not in any way counterproductive. On the contrary this process - sparse then clusterfuck then sparse then clusterfuck - has reminded me about the important role restraint plays during making and when installing work.

And not restraint in the form of holding back from adding elements but rather restraining myself from tying up too many loose ends; a certain amount of unfinishedness counterbalances the decisive elements and allows them to just be versus be seen as (potentially) anally retentive.

One skew line allows all the 'straight' lines to decisively be themselves, and not be taken for granted. This relationship between the unfinished and the finished - in a purposefully installed environment where everything is considered and counts - is of real import when setting out to build stuff and retain the casualness of the approach in the 'so-called' end product. I refer to it as a 'so-called' end product because it is just a point in time - a thing that came from a generative process. 

Note 47.43 [Stuff]     Talking of products, production and such - I am comfortable that what I exhibit is a mere by-product, and I embrace its loose sketchiness.

I am not trying to undermine the work and do recognise that some of the objects, things and motion pictures 
are probably worth framing, archiving and/or gifting. But I don't aim to make X - rather I aim to be a verb; actively engaging with my environment and by doing, undoing and redoing I find pertinent things 'n stuff that belong.

Note 47.49 [Three ecologies]     Being an outsider has its pros and cons. One advantage obviously is to have a clear view in from the outside versus being on the inside and not being fully aware of its peculiarities.

Anyhow, being in this increasingly precarious position of being an auslander has got me thinking about how important it is for my work to consider itself as part of something other than itself - for it to be aware of and acknowledge its environment and the times it exists in. Guattari's three ecologies linking environmental ecology to social ecology and to mental ecology comes to mind here.

Note 47.96 [Expanded Cinema]     When I make an installation I aim to create an immersive environment, a space that is a place - another place to fleetingly transport oneself an other place.

A key element in these environments I build is the use of motion picture. Seldom do I present video on its own, I did try it out with my Women's March film (ERL phase2) and it worked out fine, but I digress.

So, these installations are leaning towards what I hear is called Expanded Cinema, I am pleased to have found this descriptor / category. Albeit a bit heavy handed it is useful. And the book of the same title published in 1970, from which it borrows its name, has a wonderfully strange intro by Buckminster Fuller.


Note 47.55 [Truth]     In my application to join this course I mentioned my interest in the notion of Truth. I note its awkwardness and its slipperiness. A couple of years back whilst on residency in Miami I had written this poem ...

"I look for you in untidy places.
Wearing gloves has never been an option before
but now if I want to sustain the search
I may need a layer of protection.
I want life to be long,
longer, long enough
to sit comfortably again.
With you,
the Truth.”

... and now the notion of post-truth has been formally acknowledged by the Oxford dictionary as 'word of the year'. All this circles back to my concerns about the place held by the Artist - I have always hoped that the Artist could be seen as a trustworthy source and in turn be the truth-teller.

Could the Artist - who according to Cameroonian philosopher Achille Mbembe enjoys "special rights" - take on as he puts it "the task to translate society back to itself"?

Somebody needs to represent incorruptibility? (of all the members of society the Artist seems most likely to embrace debauchery and otherwiseness, but this does not mean that they lose their integrity. Yes? No?) It is fair to assume after the many exposés of corruption in organisations - be they the fourth estate (and fifth, well actually all so-called estates), corporate bodies, religious and political entities - that they all have ulterior motives that render them untrustworthy.

Note 47.57 [Who?]     Everyone makes art these days; everyone takes and makes pictures, posting them online. Then there is Art, this is made by Artists.

Media-theorist and activist Franco 'Bifo' Beradi's 2013 text "Why artists?" includes this provocative declaration - "strictly speaking Art does not exist. Artists do. Who are they? I define artists [...] as those people who stay human in times of de-humanization."

This title - Artist - is a privileged one. Josef Beuys thought otherwise declaiming that "everyone is an Artist", Gustav Metzger challenged this sweeping statement by asking him "Himmler aug?". 

Note 47.11 [Looking forward]    …


symptom as artwork
Psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan is well known for his use of the Borromean ‘knot’ to illustrate his thinking around the psyche.
After gorging himself on James Joyce’s work he added a fourth ring to his original trefoil schema which locked the rings, effectively ‘locking down’ the psyche. He named it the Sinthome, which was an archaic and hybridised way of spelling ‘symptom’.
By undergoing analysis, the analysand wishes to be ‘unlocked’, to deal with their anxiety and thereby be rid of their Sinthome.
If successful, what happens to our Sinthome?
What if we take Lacan’s topological line drawing and retro-engineer it from a line back into an object?

Okay, it is now three dimensional thing; perhaps we can see it as a bean-shaped sculpture and we can choose to call it sculpture.
Is it a bean? Perhaps a jumping bean?

Kathryn Smith writes : In ‘Cut The Bean’, founding editor of Cabinet magazine Sina Najafi describes Cabinet’s research practices and resulting product as the amplification of one fundamental principle: curiosity. Setting the terms of his case, he describes a first encounter between André Breton, Robert Caillois and a Mexican jumping bean, on the evening on December 26, 1934. Both Breton and Caillois were equally awestruck by the bean, yet Breton was deeply offended by his companion’s suggestion that they cut the bean to discover its secret. Breton’s refusal to engage in this kind of research method prompted Caillois to resign from the Surrealist movement the next day, on the grounds that he could not comply with Breton’s unwillingness to accept the possible compatibility of ‘poetry’ and ‘research’.