Lucas + Wealleans, a perfect match

Sarah Lucas, 'Situation Romans', installation view, New Burlington Place, London
Sarah Lucas, ‘Situation Romans’, installation view, New Burlington Place, London

At the start of last year Sarah Lucas opened Situation – a London-based project space featuring an organic program of events and installations by the artist, and sometimes others.  Her latest show, Situation, Romans (above) is killer, and features Lucas’s classic abject pantyhose forms and other perverse content (check out the wall frieze).

Rohan Wealleans & Sarah Lucas, 'Situation White Hole', installation view
Rohan Wealleans & Sarah Lucas, ‘Situation White Hole’, installation view

Given her penchant for the prurient, it’s no wonder Lucas struck up a friendship with New Zealand artist Rohan Wealleans when she undertook a residency in Auckland care of Two Rooms in 2011.

In the middle of last year, Lucas invited Wealleans to be part of another situation (above).  Situation White Hole featured works by Lucas alongside photographs from Wealleans’ Origins series, initially exhibited at Ivan Anthony in Auckland.  Wealleans blew the original images up to monstrous scale for Lucas’s show, so that her humble toilet assemblages were flanked by enormous, almost alien ladybits – all encrusted with the artist’s signature paint ‘gemstones’; kind of like Courbet’s The Origin of the World meets high art vajazzling.  One can’t help but wonder whether the close up scrutiny of male members in Lucas’s latest show is in direct response to Wealleans Origins objectifications.

Wealleans in Thailand last year
Wealleans in Thailand last year

En route to London Wealleans made a stopover in Thailand and had this rather magnificent photograph taken of himself in a local mall.  While he’s undecided as to what to do with it, he does have another suite of Origins-style snaps in the pipeline.  Watch this space.

Lucas + Wealleans, a perfect match

Facebook says NO to nudity

Detail of Gustave Courbet's 'Origin of the World', 1886 - too rude for Facebook

Earlier this year Facebook deleted two users’ profiles after they posted an image of Gustave Courbet’s famed 18th century rendering of ladybits, Origin of the World, and  just last week, MONA’s Facebook page was censored following a post promoting Stuart Ringholt’s forthcoming naturist art tours that featured a bare-bottomed couple admiring artworks (below).

Promo image for MONA's naked art tours - turns out bottoms are also a big Facebook no-no

Facebook supporters  of Ai Weiwei have come under fire too. When Ai was accused of distributing pornography last month, Film-maker Alison Klayman posted the photographs in question (including the snap below) on Facebook,  inviting followers to determine whether or not the images were offensive.  For this she received a warning and her account was temporarily disabled.

Accused 'pornographer' Ai Weiwei and some fellow tweeps

Facebook’s rules state that users ‘will not post content that is hateful, threatening, or pornographic’ – but do any of these images fall into these categories? Instead of over-reacting and  suspending accounts, why not let the community who uses Facebook decide what’s appropriate and what isn’t?

Facebook says NO to nudity