2010
Sarah Rapson
I.W. + 1
IW and Mashed Potatoes
Macha Poynder
Marcin Dudek
Andrew Ranville
Polygonal Workshops
2009
HIVE Projects Launch
SUBZERO
999 - Requiem to a Bridge
2008
All Capital Letters
Ilona Sagar
MAKIKO NAGAYA
La Bete
PIERS JACKSON
SEBOO MIGONE
IN PIECES
GODFRIED DONKOR
PAULMART
EMMA MCNALLY
2007
DAVID BIRKIN
STILL LIFE, STILL
ZOO ART FAIR
AVATAR OF SACRED...
EVA BENSASSON
DAVID BOULOGNE
PETER LEWIS
ALEX HAMILTON
HILARY KOOB-SASSEN
VANITY
MADDALENA AMBROSIO
LIANE LANG
2006
ZOO ART FAIR
CANNIBAL FEROX
ART CHICAGO
THE END OF CIVILISATION
ARK
2005
THE PATTERN OF THE PLANS
STEWART HOME
CLARISSE HAHN
ADRIEN SINA
PHYSICAL LITERATURE
2004
PAULMART
EVA WEINMAYR
PETER KALKHOF
MANUEL SAIZ
EVA BENSASSON
ALEXANDER COSTELLO
TOM ELLIS
AMIKAM TOREN
MARK AERIAL WALLER
2003
OTTO MUEHL
GUSTAV METZGER
METZGER CONGRESS
PHYSICAL LITERATURE
  10.12.04 - 20.01.05

Martin Sexton - Writer, Artist
James Cauty -   Blacksmoke,  Artist
Ronnie Kray - Artist
Count Rodo - Artist
Gay Stalker Vs Dwarf DJ - Entities
Rod Dickinson - Artist
Stuart Home - Writer, Artist
Alex De Cadenet - Artist
Jamie Reid - Artist
Arron - Messiah
The Prada-Meinhof Gang - Art Collective

Rebel Without Applause
Aaron and the Jerusalem Syndrome.


He has dressed up as Osama bin Laden and now Christ - it would not be unfair to say that generally amongst so called 'professional' comedians - in whose space he occasionally is thought to occupy - he's universally hated and now officially ignored. The art world will no doubt view him as an embarrassment. He has spent time in prison for a  seemingly misplaced action. Throwing paint over the Chapman Bros in a somewhat haphazard fashion - in mitigating circumstances they had just thrown some over Goya ...but the judge in question was unclear as to the niceties or complexities of  contemporary art. Aaron is probably best known amongst the general public for dressing up as Osama Bin Laden and gate crashing the House of Windsor. I had been thinking about the Jerusalem Syndrome recently when I received a phone call from Wolfe and he threw me in at the deep end:
'Yeah great, anyway, look I'm just passing you over to Aaron, he's an artist, well at least he thinks he his...is that ok?'
'Er...er.'
'Hello. Martin?. It's Aaron.'
Somewhere in the conversation he mentioned 'Rebel Without Applause' It was so seductive, like an incantation it played on my mind for several days. It was probably the longest conversation I've ever had with Wolfe and we spent it talking entirely about Aaron. Appropriately enough I was standing outside the wolf enclosure in Regents Park  - whilst Wolfe was on the other end of the phone..somewhere...I looked back inside the enclosure...but I couldn't see any wolves anywhere.  It was worrying, but it was already too late. There was only one way this was going to get any better and that was to make it a lot worse. I was walking up the stairs of Blacks in Soho, behind me was Mark Pilkington the co-founder of Strange Attractor magazine and a contributing editor to the Fortean Times, he was having a conversation with Christian - a black belt in multiple martial art disciplines and the co-fouder of the Illustrated Ape magazine - I had just introduced them - they had just found out that they are both Austrian. Something was about to happen but I was not entirely sure what it would be - their conversation was ascending along with them to the first floor. I caught something about a concept for a reality TV show based on the miracles of Christ. The basic premise being that a number of volunteers would be stranded on an island and would somehow perform the trials and attempt the miracles of Christ. The winner would be declared de-facto Messiah and the world would be saved, world peace would be declared and we could all rest safely in our beds. Somehow and in someway I knew this had already taken place. Aaron had just performed the stations of the cross in Jerusalem -  as far as Messiah potential boxes could be ticked, his bonifides were good - his father was on the board of the British Deputies of Jews.

A few weeks earlier with Wolfe we contemplated the photograph of Aaron being whipped by a faux Roman Centurion whilst carrying out the stations of the cross in Calvary in Jerusalem - a number of young Palestinian boys are witnessing it all and laughing. A few weeks later I'm in Aaron's flat in Kilburn inspecting his cross with British Airways customs cellotape neatly binding its beams - Aaron explained that it was too awkward to have been stowed in the hold..so he had to take it on as hand luggage.....

James Cauty - Stonehenge Vs Auto Destruction.


'Jimmy (James Cauty) spent a year doing a series of large paintings depicting apocalyptic scenes involving ourselves, the destruction of Stonehenge, the unleashing of dark forces and the death of thousands...then he destroyed the lot by sanding the paint off the canvases, carefully sweeping up the dust and keeping it in a series of jam jars. One jam jar for each painting. Why? Best not to ask. We all deal with our moments of doubt in different ways.' - Bill Drummond 45 (2000)

I arrived at Jimmy's studio somewhere in Brighton - down away from the tourist machine, past the beautiful burnt out skeletal body of the old pier - James Cauty's studio lay further down by the fractured old industry and up on a hill.

I parked the Duridic White Kraut Rock Sampler Henge mobile in the yard. Jimmy claimed nobody had visited his studio before, he was warm and welcoming. I asked Jimmy about the pier - we passed comment on its installation properties. 'How exactly did it get that way?' I asked. 'Somebody launched a firework into it.' was the simple reply. I tried not to give Jimmy a knowing look.  I walked around and into the recording room with the black mixing desk and the gold draped along the wall between the speakers for 'acoustic properties.' Then past the tent where he slept, inside which was an earthquake bed, constructed by Gimpo, simply and elegantly from scaffolding poles. Then there it was - a huge painting. Sometimes you see something and well, you are not quite prepared for it. There in a vast scene lay Stonehenge,  being struck by lightning,  and echoing Turner's vision. A huge expanse of portent sky consumed a large part of the canvas, below, down from the ignited exploding  stones; a camper van, dancing  hippies and caked out festival goers were being consumed by the chthonic earth; heralding them all down to Dante's world and a black, red, orange, liquid crust. The point of origin of the destructive bolt was a large white swastika, floating with an hallucinatory clarity amongst the beautiful black swept sky.

I think I asked Jimmy a question, he may have even given me an answer, but by that time it all gone way past the ordinary. Besides I had a letter on my person from the Royal Mail and quoting 'Palace disapproval' of Jimmy's gas mask Queens.

We spoke strategies, bankruptcy, and domestic implosion. Inevitably Stonehenge came up again. The Prada-Meinhof Gang had just recorded 'Hammer of the Goddess' and the Blacksmoke Organisation had supplied a totemic re-mix. From its inception I had always imagined all of the women performing this at Stonehenge. Jimmy promised to supply a map; locating the specific resting place of an 'object' buried there and now requiring retrieval.... Martin Sexton 2004

Academic Qualifications and the Prada-Meinhof Gang


It was 2002 I had was in the middle of taking an excruciatingly painful MA in creative writing at Middlesex University. The best thing about it was the campus. Located in Tottenham, down from the Broadwater Farm estate. It was a wonderful collection of 20th century buildings covering every decade and scattered haphazardly amongst its grounds. The area was pure working class with a predominantly immigrant population. I felt comfortable in the area - after all I had grown up there. When I first heard of the course, I naively got excited, after all this was to be the first ever MA in creative writing to take place within London - a city that I love. I started to dream. Yes. It was going to be just like the legendary University of East Anglia courses. I fantasised about taking acid with Michael Moorcock and comparing notes with Malcolm Bradbury: He would tell me about the shagabilty of fellow students and lecturers and I would tell him that I had once executed a painting of Dr Howard Kirk in semen. We would talk ideally of the end of realism, get drunk and shout 'Long live experimentation!' I soon calmed down quickly enough. The warning signs were all there. I chose to ignore them.  First I had banished from my mind that fact that Michael Moorcock had long fucked off to Texas, preferring cleaner air and romantic exile in the desert and that  East Anglia was quite some distance from Tottenham N.17.  Then came the news that Malcom Bradbury had passed away on the first week of term. The first writing I submiited was a tribute to both of them - Moorcock's great work on our glorious city -Mother London- and Bradbury's love of every passing intellectual fad executed in his campus novels - The History Man. We had been asked to write about our favourite best seller. My tale concerned one Phyllis Pearsall, who rose at 5.00am in the morning and walked 18 hours every day, constructing her great work. Her book contained the names of all the great writers, playrights, lovers, politicians, artists and architects transversing the metropolis and was possesed or read by every Londoner regardless of literary capicity. Students and lecturers alike seemed intrigued by my choice - having no idea to as what the actual book I was refering to was - Some strange suggestions were volunteered as to what my choice could possibly be. Under pressure I revelaed it was the A-Z of London. 'But that's not a proper book' they all cried in unison.

Things went from bad to worse. I dutifully read the suggested reading list, submitted my critical take when requested, made the odd diametrically opposed view when bored. The tutor had her suspicions and chose to deal with it head-on;  in that polite middle class way - she asked if everything was ok at home. I grinded my teeth and sought solice in one or two of my fellow students. I decided that somehow like Phyllis Pearsall I would create my own Physical Literature - map out my own book; intellectual fads were still in. Psychogeograpy had replaced Geomancy. Except this time I would create my own walking, talking, living book.

I waited - I placed faith in the Goddess - to cure my depression i had been constatly re-reading Robert Graves 'The White Goddess.' I was close to the end of the course and by some happy fate Fay Weldon had been invited to attend the campus. I was quitely excited - her new book was receiving awful reviews - i liked it. Practically everybody had missed the point. Entitled the 'Bulgari Connection' Fay had managed to single-handedly piss off most fellow writers and litrary critics. On the rare occasions this happens I always find it strangely seductive. Fay had commited the cardinal sin - she had taken cold cash to write a novel with 'product placement.'  Originally requested to just  mention or drop the brand name 'Bulgari' into her next novel, Fay had dispensed with this tinkering and quite rightly decided to mention 'Bulgari' at least three hundred times and if that was not good enough to title her book The Bulgari Connnection. Fay had gloriously and monumentally pissed in the font. Missing the point entirely, one or two hysterical writers wanted to 'hang the witch.' The premise of the book was at once very new yet dealt with something that has always been there - the principle of Art and Patronage.

Fay arrived and sat at the head of the table dressed immaculately in black, her blond bob was cut beautifully and she was want to occasionally stroke a large collection of ludicrously large rock necklace diamonds draped across her neck. She was laid back and totally in control.  Somebody asked her what her next novel was about. 'I don't know.'she said, 'Maybe I'll write about the vibes at Glastonbury Tor.' I was in love. My moment had come, Aurora a fellow student  was sitting next to me, I turned to her and said 'I'll take Fay's book, I'll sample it, construct a pop song, call it 'Want is Your Master' you'll perform it, we'll find five more incarnate goddesss. It will be chapter one, but it will unfold everywhere.' Aurora gave me her 'I want to believe'  look. Encouraged, I approached Fay. Having never having met her before, I simply explained that I had 'sampled' her novel, that the  Prada-Meinhof Gang had somehow constructed a 'Pop Song' as a consequence - entitled 'Want is your Master' and that I  would send her the 'lyrics.' Fay smiled, she gave me her e-mail - but I wanted to her telephone number.

UFOs
'GIVE ME FIFTEEN MINUTES OF YOUR LIFE'
UFO's. Do you love them? Do you want to believe?


I had been told of an abduction at or near Stonehenge some years back involving a highly respected internationally renowned writer. At the time, for legal reasons, I only referred to him as Mr Tiswas - it was a playful allusion to a character in one of his novels. Rumours had persisted for some time - encouraged by me - that following a kind of psychic breakdown, following the publication of: Among the Believers: An Islamic Journey - a wonderful book dealing with the spectacle of a religion in the process of interpreting itself as social order. He had sort solace by the re-invigorating powers of a small cottage on an estate near Salisbury in Wiltshire. Not far from Stonehenge.

Some say that his book; which in autobiographical style, plays out a kind of healing process - in that in discovering a form and content - the fantasies and posturing of his earlier work is steadily replaced by a colder and clearer determination to watch and observe without illusion - of course some would argue precisely the opposite - in fact the writer himself comments 'I had discovered in myself..a deep interest in others, a wish to visualise the details and routine of their lives, to see the world through their eyes; and with this came..-almost a sixth sense - of what was uppermost in their thoughts.' Yes. but what was uppermost in Mr Tiswas's thoughts. Throughout the Enigma of Arrival little or no attention is played to Stonehenge. He comments briefly on the Stones - from a distance - as if wishing to block them out - cutting out  the anarchy, the power of their influence..but of course they are there throughout - playfully modelling his landscape, as he tinkers methodically with the mantra like tedium of his descriptive prose.

Around this time Rod with some others, was creating crop circles in Wiltshire. Although Rod has always maintained that prior to creating crop circles he once witnessed a UFO in a crop circle. The writer  and ethno botanist, Terence McKenna at a conference with Rod on the premise of alien life forms made the following comment:

'But the question still remains; are there UFOs , Flying saucers, nuts and bolts craft, coming down, abducting hapless victims and interfering with their genitals? I say not - but there is a tradition in all times and places, of social commerce between human beings and various types of discarnate entities, or non human intelligence's. This could have been as simple as the Celtic farmer's wife leaving out a pitcher of milk for faery folk, or it could take a more elaborate form, but whatever form it takes this commerce is expressive of a very fundamental belief system that seems to be inherent in the human condition...   

Listen I have no doubt that there are entities out there - I've met them, all you have to do is take DMT (Di Methyl Tryptamine). Fifteen minutes that's all it takes, give me fifteen minutes of your life and I'll give you a 20% chance of meeting Alien life forms. Forget all that horseshit about UFO researchers, hypnosis and abductions. I wouldn't trust a UFO researcher with my chickens. Just give me fifteen minutes of your life..'

From conversation between artist, Rod Dickinson and author and ethno botanist Terence McKenna, which took place at "The Incident', a symposium on art and phenomena, held in Fribourg, Switzerland, June '95:

Handsome Bastards


'I want to concentrate on the dimmer of the two, Ronnie Kray; a man whose grasp on reality was so slight and pathologically deranged that he was able to live out a crude, primary coloured fiction, twisting the city into a shape of a bad thriller. His story is an urban morality tale, and to understand it is to understand one of the deepest of all wellsprings of city life: he shows how a style, cheaply come by in the emporium of the city may completely supplant every forecastable reality, every determinable social pattern. He is city man as wilful artist; and those of us who live in cities are perhaps a good deal closer to him then we like to think.' -Jonathan Raban- Soft City - 1974

I was talking to Count Rodo. I had picked him up from the family seat in Hampshire in the Henge mobile. We were heading along the A303 passing Stonehenge on our right and I commented that Fay Weldon lived quite close -

I often think about the unusual coincidence that occurred when I first met her at her home. I relayed the story to Rodo. On that first occasion I noticed that in her library she possessed a first edition copy of 'The Ape of God' by Wyndham Lewis. Her partner Nick was sitting in there with me and we were discussing books - my hand was drawn to its spine and I removed it from the shelf - 'That's strange that you've picked that book' commented Nick. 'Did you know Fay takes that book with her, everywhere she goes?' It was happening again. I looked at Nick and said - you know I have a first edition too - it's with me now. 'Exactly how many books do you have with you?' asked Nick incredulously. Just the one, I replied. - it's in the Henge mobile, in the trunk. 'The Henge mobile!?' it was getting a bit too much.

'FAY!' screamed Nick - Fay walked in and explained that as a young girl she had once unknowingly lived in the former home of Wyndham Lewis. We walked out to my car and I opened the trunk - I passed over the copy, I insisted that she should have it - the pair would make perfect bookends - Wyndham Lewis would have approved, I commented. I thought about letting her know that I too had a thing about Apes. Nick photographed us both with our instant Wyndham Lewis installation.

Count Rodo was used to these kind of happenings and indeed we had experienced many similar events together. The story passed without comment. Besides we were about to undertake a new Physical Literature chapter ourselves - on our way down to Cornwall and the Earl of St Germans estate. I had in my possession a 1000 piece jigsaw by Blacksmoke - it would require assembling in the main house on the estate. Once assembled - Cast in funeral black - our monarch was reversed in a large mock-postage stamp relief wearing a gas mask - behind her lay text covering every delineation of black in a long dark mantra - the figure 4th was writ large - in some cod echo of the fourth Reich. There was a dispute as to the legality of the image and the Royal Mail had successfully forced a London gallery to remove a similar image from its walls only that week. The construction of the piece would involve the general public and fellow artists and writers attending that years Port Eliot Literary Festival. It would take place in the oldest inhabited house in Britain. Many things occurred during our three days there - but it was then that Count Rodo, casually remarked, that he possessed an exceptional painting by one Ronnie Kray.

Jamie ReId
Shamanarcy


A little known fact about Jamie Reid is that his great great uncle was the arch druid of England. Photographs exist of him performing ceremonies at Stonehenge in full regalia. Jamie is one of our great artists who is shamefully ignored by the art establishment - no doubt, a long way in  the future  - they will gather and say how they all loved and adored him in the first place. Jamie was a founding situationist and punk iconagrapher, so he has been well schooled in the cynicism of everyday life. Yet Jamie has never lost his sense of wonder. If you are an artist or a writer and you do, it's like death. Jamie has shown me some wonderful things, Jamie has created some wonderful things, Jamie has told me wonderful things. And then there was the day that Jamie told me about the story of the 'Switching off of Stonehenge.'

Gay Stalker Vs Dwarf DJ
Thong Genocide


The least said about the above mentioned entities the better. So I will keep this brief. Needless to say it involves a cocaine fuelled rolls Royce table constructed by Ringo Starr and subsequently owned by Freddy Mercury, Elton John and the Archetypes - One Flinton Chalk and Martin Sexton. To cut a long and beautiful story short - you will just have to witness this and ask questions later.

The Skull Portraits

I first met Alex at the Feast of Saint Lucia in Brompten Cemetery. The Archetypes had just created an installation altar for the Prada-Meinhof Gang's 'Submission' film. A large UFO had just landed on a building and was disguising itself as architecture. We walked amongst the dead and discussed the radiation of human skulls. Alex had spent the previous few years radiating quite a few. Including Tutankhamun and Adolph Hitlers and the Iman of Regents Park Mosque. He seemed inclined  to radiate my skull. We  hung out and talked about changes on the molecular level - he was preoccupied with numbers - a certain number of skull portraits had to be laid down each incremental year....