Mandy El-Sayegh talks to Ben Luke about her influences—from writers to film-makers and, in fact, different artists—and the cultural experiences which have formed her life and work.
El-Sayegh, born in Selangor, Malaysia, in 1985 and now dwelling in London, makes work, sculptures, installations, movies and performances that assemble disparate supplies to discover the human physique and thoughts inside various social, cultural and political contexts. Shifting freely and intuitively throughout these disciplines and media, she creates arresting correspondences between picture and textual content, between the pure and the synthetic, and between the senses and the mind.
She discusses rising up with a replica of Albrecht Dürer’s Christ on the Cross on the wall, the facility of Paul Thek’s various work, her love of the South Korean artist Keunmin Lee’s work, the poetry of Theresa Hak Kyung Cha and the movies of David Cronenberg. Plus, she offers perception into life within the studio and solutions our normal questions, together with the final word: “what’s artwork for?”
• Mandy El-Sayegh, Interiors, Thaddaeus Ropac, London, 1-30 September
• Mandy El-Sayegh: In-Session, Tichy Ocean Basis, Zurich, till 30 November
• The e book The Makeshift Physique: Mandy El-Sayegh, Black Canine Publishing, revealed in September, £29.95/$39.95
This podcast is sponsored by Bloomberg Connects, the humanities and tradition app.
The free app presents entry to an unlimited vary of worldwide cultural organisations by way of a single obtain, with new guides being added often. They embody two UK galleries that just lately hosted Larry Achiampong’s travelling exhibition Wayfinder—MK Gallery in Milton Keynes and Turner Modern in Margate. For those who obtain the app, you will see that that the MK Gallery information has in-depth options on present and up to date exhibitions, together with Larry’s present, with photographs and audio exploring completely different works throughout his profession. Within the information to Turner Modern, you may hear Larry’s dialogue about that model of the present with the curator and author Aïcha Mehrez, together with options on Turner Modern’s newest exhibitions and initiatives.