Ed Fornieles

Ed Fornieles

Ed Fornieles
Born 6 April 1983
Winchester, UK
Nationality British
Occupation Artist
Movement Post-internet, performance art, sculpture, installation art

Edward ″Ed ″ Fornieles (b.1983) is a Montreal-based Postinternet Artist. Fornieles uses film, social media platforms, sculpture, installation and performance to express the interaction of family, relationships, popular memes, language and the subcultures of 21st century experience.

Biography

Ed Fornieles was born in rural Hampshire, where his parents had an architectural practice. Fornieles attended Oxford University receiving his BFA from the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art in 2005. He went on to the Royal College of Art in London completing an MA in sculpture in 2011. While in graduate school Fornieles worked as a studio assistant to Anish Kapoor where he demonstrated his extensive technical skills.[1] Living in East London, he often worked as a freelance data analyst[2] while he immersed himself in art and curating, having established in 2007 (with Ross McNicol and Vanessa Carlos), the Wallis Gallery[3] During this time Fornieles work evolved mocking, often with a dark sense of humour, the high seriousness of the London art scene.[4]

Ed Fornieles has lived and worked in London, Los Angeles and Montreal.

Work

Ed Fornieles was first recognized for his performance pieces such as, Animal House (2011)[5] at the experimental space, Guest Projects in London. Animal House helped refine a method that Fornieles would repeat in his subsequent works, engaging participants and viewers in sometimes awkward situations.[6] Dorm Daze, grew out of Fornieles' interest in American fraternity culture as a large-scale on-line performance played-out on Facebook, where participants adopted profiles taken from real life American college students.[2] Fornieles work focuses on the effect of narratives, habits and technology in the formation of social roles and personal identity. He uses performance to re-enact and distort relationships to archetypes and conventions. Each chapter of work is driven by an intense period of research centered on reinterpreting and remodeling the subject under investigation. The Dreamy Awards (2012),[7] was a fictional ceremony initiated to raise questions about the cult of the awards bash. The work was was presented at the Serpentine Galleries Park Nights with the participation of over 200 people including actor Zac Efron in a pre-recorded video clip. Other works include, New York New York Happy Happy (NY NY HP HP) (2013) where Fornieles was invited by Rhizome to organize a gala at the New Museum.[8] The event was controversial because Fornieles scripted both actual Museum donors and actors blurring any sense of reality. Modern Family (2014) was a sullen installation where Fornieles explored the breakdown of the family both metaphorically and literally.[9]

Ed Fornieles first solo gallery exhibition, The Hangover Part II, constructed from the detritus of Animal House, was organized at the Carlos/Ishikawa Gallery, London in 2011. Other significant sculptural installations include Characterdate, Frame (2012), at the Frieze Art Fair, London,[10] where he continued demonstrating his interest in American college culture. Despicable Me 2 (2013) at the Mihai Nicodim Gallery in Los Angeles,[11] invented a female character, "Britney Rivers" who develops a stereotypical personality as she builds her network of friends on Social Media. With Jupiter Ascending (2015) at Carl Kostyal, Stockholm, Fornieles recreated a spa reflecting the meditative culture associated with care of the body and Der Geist: Flesh Feast (2016) at Arratia Beer in Berlin continued the body theme in which Fornieles expressed, through film, objects and installation, his attempt to adopt a self-management diet. Fornieles has also been invited to participate in important group shows curated to bring together postinternet creators. These include Meanwhile... Suddenly, and Then curated by Gunnar B. Kvaranat for the 12e Biennale d'art contemporain de Lyon,[12] Family state of mind (2014) with Petra Cortright at Galerie Chez Valentin in Paris,[13] and I feel we think bad (2016) with Hannah Perry and Matt Goerzen at Arsenal in Montreal[14]

Bibliography

Decline, Yves (3 March 2016) "An interview with Ed Fornieles" atractivoquenobello.
Herbert, Martin (14 February 2014) "Ed Fornieles, Algorithmic Identities", Mousse, No. 42, Milan.
Jansen, Charlotte (27 March 2010) "Edward Fornieles explains Performance Art".
Luke, Ben (21 August 2014) "Virtual family man: Ed Fornieles, artist and former boyfriend of Felicity Jones on 'post-internet' art” Evening Standard, London.
McNeil, Joanne (2 April 2012) "Artist Profile: Ed Fornieles” Rhizome.
Obrist, Hans Ulrich (23 January 2012) Theater Basel DLD Conference, "Ways Beyond the Internet", HVB Forum, Munich.

References

  1. http://www.artslant.com/9/articles/show/44437
  2. 1 2 "Artist Profile: Ed Fornieles". rhizome.org. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  3. "It's show time: Meet the ambitious young 'galleristas' behind". independent.co.uk. 16 December 2007. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  4. "Silver spoon successes: The intellectual, affluent and well-connected". independent.co.uk. 13 August 2010. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  5. Lack, Jessica (21 January 2011). "American pie-eyed: Ed Fornieles's Animal House". Retrieved 14 November 2016 via The Guardian.
  6. "performing ourselves: revisiting dorm daze with ed fornieles – read – i-D". vice.com. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  7. Dazed (7 September 2012). "The Dreamy Awards". dazeddigital.com. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  8. Chou, Kimberly (8 November 2013). "Reality Bending Benefit". Retrieved 14 November 2016 via Wall Street Journal.
  9. "Virtual family man: Ed Fornieles, artist and former boyfriend of". standard.co.uk. 21 August 2014. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  10. Dazed. "Ed Fornieles". dazeddigital.com. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  11. name, Site. "Ed Fornieles, by Jonathan Griffin / ArtReview". artreview.com. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  12. name, Site. "12th Biennale de Lyon, by Oliver Basciano / ArtReview". artreview.com. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  13. https://www.aqnb.com/2014/05/21/family-state-of-mind-valentin-may-23-jun-28/
  14. "Arsenal Montréal: l'art post-internet – Éric Clément – Arts visuels". lapresse.ca. Retrieved 14 November 2016.

External links

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