The best things to do in London, Celebrate Bankside during Merge Festival - The Telegraph

An immersive art project 
Time Out

The coolest arts festivals on the calendar - Red Bull

Merge Art Festival Set To Ignite Bankside This Autumn - Art Lyst

This annual arts festival takes over Bankside, highlighting the area's heritage, architecture and culture - Time Out

Now in its second year, Merge Festival breathes life into London's Bankside - 
The Telegragh

SPONSORED AND CREATED BY


Business-led regeneration body seeking to
improve the quality of the local environment
and to help enhance trade. Visit the website

Visit the website


Central London riverside visitor destination, with world class attractions including Tate Modern, Shakespeare's Globe and Borough Market.
Visit the website

SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTER
This form does not yet contain any fields.
    TWITTER
    Wednesday
    Nov302011

    Believe the Magic by Jimmy Cauty 

     

    Date: Friday 5th October.
    Time: 6.30pm til 7pm
    Location: The Starr Auditorium, Tate Modern, Bankside, London SE1 9TG
    FREE TICKETED EVENT

     

     

     

    Believe the Magic is a new short film that was made by Jimmy Cauty with music by the D.1.Light Industrial Orchestra.

    James Cauty's roguish and voluble approach has earned him a cult following for work that remains radical, responsive and darkly comical.

With Bill Drummond he formed the KLF in 1989 and the K Foundation in 1991, and describes their actions as a "brit award buried at Stonehenge, bad crop circles and a wicker man" and "a major body of cash and a box of matches". This was followed by similarly bizarre activities with 'K2 Plant Hire Ltd' and in 1997 'Advanced Acoustic Armaments' ("home made sonic weapons and a dead cow").

    In 2002 Cauty started to produce the contentious 'Stamps of Mass Destruction' with Blacksmoke (an imagined collective that became real), and pursued the art of philately with a new imagined collective the C.N.P.D. (Cautese Nationál Postal Disservice) 2004-2008. 

Since before the start of "the war" Cauty has been producing work that draws on and responds to contemporary culture, very often sampling it and sending/selling it back as recoded realities. In billboard and stamp projects Mickey Mouse was sent to Iraq in 'Operation Magic Kingdom' whilst Julie Andrews danced across vast rubbish heaps and crushed cars were sold to second hand car dealers as art.

    Since then he has collaborated with his teenage son in the "Splatter" project as jCauty&SON and spearheaded a Red Rag to a Bull campaign that sought to rebalance an unfair situation. 

    Cauty is represented by L-13

    http://www.l-13.org

    Sponsored by S+O Media