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24 September 2014
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01.07.03

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Giant art installation by Fiona Rae unveiled at ´óÏó´«Ã½ Broadcasting House, London


Signal by Fiona RaeA giant art installation was launched today (Tuesday 1 July) on the prow of ´óÏó´«Ã½ Broadcasting House, London.


The image, Signal, by artist Fiona Rae is the first of a programme of temporary art commissions developed by the ´óÏó´«Ã½ to accompany the refurbishment of its iconic central London building.


The installation was launched by John Smith, ´óÏó´«Ã½'s Director of Finance, Property and Business Affairs and Alan Yentob, Director of Drama, Entertainment and C´óÏó´«Ã½.


With Broadcasting House under scaffolding for approximately a year while the building beneath is transformed, the ´óÏó´«Ã½ has initiated a Temporary Programme of large-scale artworks to be displayed on the prow of the building, commissioned from established and emerging artists.


Signal is the first of four large-scale art installations which will cover the prow of the building between now and February 2004.


Under the theme of broadcasting, the artists selected for the programme are Fiona Rae, William Furlong and Liz Rideal.


The fourth commission in this series will be the winner of a Blue Peter design competition based a child's eye view of broadcasting.


Between July 2003 and February 2004, four installations will be erected on the prow of Broadcasting House:

1 Jul – 31 Aug 2003 Fiona Rae Signal
Sep – Nov 2003 William Furlong Acts of Inscribing
Dec 2003 – Jan 2004 Blue Peter winner Ìý
Jan– Feb 2004 Liz Rideal Kerfuffle

The redevelopment of Broadcasting House, London, the UK's first purpose-built broadcasting venue, hailed as a superb example of art deco architecture when it opened in 1932, will establish it as the largest live broadcasting centre in the world.


It is the flagship project in an ambitious development programme for ´óÏó´«Ã½ property UK-wide.


Other plans include major new buildings at White City, improvements to Television Centre (from 2008), Pacific Quay - a flagship development for ´óÏó´«Ã½ Scotland in Glasgow, the Mailbox - the ´óÏó´«Ã½'s new base in the heart of Birmingham and new developments in Leeds, Leicester, Norwich and Hull.


Continuing the ´óÏó´«Ã½'s long tradition as a patron of the arts, inspirational architectural design and public art will be at the heart of the new buildings.


At Broadcasting House there are a number of commissioning strands: the Temporary Programme, Artists on Site and Permanent Commissions.


During 2002-2003, under the Artists on Site programme, a number of artists have been invited to respond to the changing environment in and around Broadcasting House.


Videos have been created by Catherine Yass, Tom Gidley and Brian Catling; Richard Wentworth and Ruth Maclennan developed a pilot education project, creating a film with 15 nine-year-olds from Gateway School, Westminster; and William Furlong has researched a sound promenade /audiowork created from objects in the former Sound Effects Store.


John Riddy and Nick Danziger have been appointed to document the people and architectural changes involved in this unique architectural and artistic project and Rachel Whiteread invited to make a work in response to Room 101, the inspiration for the notorious room in George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty Four.


One of the key objectives of the new Broadcasting House development is to engage with ´óÏó´«Ã½ audiences and the public in general in a more direct and accessible way than in the past.


The architectural vision for the building has this at its core with new public spaces being created which will be a focus for a spectrum of cultural, artistic, media and entertainment actitivies.


The public space Permanent Commissions will be launched later this year, subject to planning approvals.


The development at White City aims to integrate the ´óÏó´«Ã½ far more into the local community, and to increase public access.


The public art programme there aims to define White City as a new destination in West London.


It includes art and architecture collaborations with lighting artwork by Tim Head and colour advice from Japanese artist Yuko Shiraishi; video art and photography; education projects with local schools; and audio art by way of a commission to American artist Bill Fontana.


Notes to Editors


Broadcasting House: Temporary Public Art Programme


Fiona Rae: Signal


Artist's Statement: The image for the ´óÏó´«Ã½ contains a multiplicity of languages, signs and forms isolated from their original contexts in order to combine in new and unexpected ways.


These images and fragments of language carry with them vestiges of their original meaning and yet in their new setting can also suggest other interpretations.

It's like telling a story using half-remembered words and glimpses of mysterious imagery to create a vivid world in someone else's imagination.


I think that it has a strong relationship with the notion of broadcasting in that it demonstrates that a literal explanation is not always necessary for clear communication and fresh understanding.


Biographical Details: Born in Hong Kong in 1963, Fiona Rae lives and works in London. She graduated from Goldsmith's College, London, in 1987.


The imagery in her paintings quotes from an eclectic and wide variety of sources including graphic design, fashion, music, film and comics.


Her use of colour, texture, movement and form are all strongly related to the history and activity of painting.


In the late 1990s Rae began to use a computer in her work and with this the inclusion of more hard-edged pictorial elements such as fonts.


She has exhibited in Europe, America and Japan and her work is in the collections including Arts Council England, Tate, London and the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon.


She is represented by Timothy Taylor Gallery in the UK.


William Furlong: Acts of Inscribing


Artist's Statement: The image will be one of my photographs of the sound effects store in old Broadcasting House, a room which no longer exists.


It held an extraordinary collection of objects (from buzzers, locks, kettle whistles to shoes, straps, bells, telephones, tins, toys and drums) all united by their ability to make a sound.


The image with its use of perspective invites the eye into space of Broadcasting House, turning the building inside out, and representing the essential history of broadcast sound in the ´óÏó´«Ã½.


It will be accompanied by speakers playing various choreographed sequences of sounds recorded from the objects in the store. To the listener it will appear as if these humorous and engaging sounds are hovering just in front of the hoarding.


Biographical Details: Born in Woking in 1944, William Furlong lives and works in London. His work engages with and explores sound and its reception and perception.


Furlong manipulates, choreographs and interprets sound, working with a myriad of different sources from conversation, speech and dialogue and its many individual nuances to the sounds of birds singing.


For the last thirty years he has edited Audio Arts, a magazine of contemporary art, recording and documenting conversations and interviews with artists.


Furlong is recognised for his on-going and important contribution and engagement with this medium as artist and commentator.


He has exhibited widely nationally and internationally and recently had a solo show at the South London Gallery and is currently making a work for the Chianti Sculpture Park, Siena.


Liz Rideal: Kerfuffle


Artist's Statement: A deeply voyeuristic image tantalises the viewer – enticing us into a visual game of 'what is behind that curtain?'


The red drape plays with the idea of concealing a wrapped Broadcasting House, prior to revealing a transformed building to the public.


The startling colour of this resonant and striking photographic collage, jumps out at us, grasping our attention, as the hands pull back the fabric symbolising dramatic action and communication.


In Shakespeare's Hamlet there is mystery and intrigue – the death of Polonius behind the arras … the mutable fabric symbolising and representing the demarcation line between reality and fantasy, this world and that – cloth in, and as, performance.


The curtain, vestige of the theatre and a relic of the painted portrait, is manipulated to perform within the miniature space of the mundane photo-booth.


The tiny photographs (measuring 5 x 4 cms) provide the basic elements for this transformation into giant artwork, provoking our suspension of disbelief.


This visual conundrum - a celebration of the evolution of the dramatic arts from radio through to digital tv - will disappear inviting the audience to become the spectators of the future ´óÏó´«Ã½.


Biographical Details: Born in England in 1954, Liz Rideal lives and works in London.


Since 1985 she has photographed objects and events using the photo-booth, and combined these images in a series of collages.


Mediated by the framing device of the photo-booth, the images reference the process and performance of picture-making and photography.


Scale and modular repetition of the individual photo-booth images play with the overall size, format and layout of the final images, with a trompe l'oeil effect.


She has exhibited widely including solo shows at The Photographer's Gallery, London, Angel Row Gallery, Nottingham, and group exhibitions at the Palais du Louvre, Paris, The Coutauld Institute, London, Threadwaxing Space, New York and the Barbican Art Gallery, London.


The Broadcasting House Public Art Programme is devised and managed by Modus Operandi Art Consultants.


The White City public art strategy has been devised and developed by [APM] Art Project Management.


Broadcasting House, London - the creation of a major new broadcast centre


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