Paul Rooney (artist)

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Paul Rooney
Paul Rooney portrait 2.jpg
Born1967
Alma mater
OccupationArtist
Notable work
Lucy Over Lancashire
AwardsNorthern Art Prize (2008)
Websitewww.paulrooney.info

Paul Rooney (born 1967 in Liverpool) is an English artist who works with music and words, primarily through installations and records.

He studied painting at Edinburgh College of Art, graduating with an MFA in 1991. In the late 1990s his art practice shifted from painting to music, initially with the band Rooney and their three experimental lo-fi punk pop albums about everyday life.[1] His work later focussed on music within gallery installations, performances and video works.

His art works often explore the difficulties inherent in the representation of 'place'. The curator Claire Doherty wrote that: "Rooney asserts [the] occupation of place through real and fictional occurrences, acknowledging the overlooked and proposing the equal status of urban myth and lived experience."[2][3]

Rooney was the winner of Art Prize North in 2003,[4] the Northern Art Prize in 2008,[5] and the Morton Award for Lens Based Work in 2012.[6] His works have been purchased for the Arts Council Collection[7] and through the Contemporary Art Society Acquisitions Scheme.[8]

Career: 1990s[]

The three CD music albums released from 1998 to 2000 under the band name Rooney (not the later US band of the same name)[9] were broadcast by BBC Radio 1 (John Peel Show) and BBC Radio 3 (Mixing It) amongst others,[10] and the track Went to Town reached number 44 in John Peel's Festive Fifty of 1998.[11] All of the Rooney songs were centred around lyrics describing banal events, everyday objects or mundane jobs, with home-recorded lo-fi music exalting/disrupting these observations in various ways. As well as a solo recording project, Rooney became a live band in time to record a Peel session in 1999, but the project ended after a third album was released in 2000.

2000s[]

Paul Rooney continued to perform or work with other musicians in the early 2000s, such as The NWRA House Band, touring a 'variety night' and a 'rock opera' amongst other performance projects.[12] His gallery works — now primarily sound/music based installations but also including video and writing — developed through commissions for organisations such as Sound and Music and Film and Video Umbrella,[12][13][14] and through a period of residencies and fellowships at institutions in the UK[15][16] (including Tate Liverpool[17] and Oxford University,[18]) and abroad, from Havana to Melbourne.

Paul Rooney: La Décision Doypack (commissioned by Radar and Matt's Gallery), 16mm film still, 2008.

Electric Earth: Film and Video from Britain, a British Council exhibition which toured internationally from 2003, included early music/video work by Rooney.[19] In 2004 he curated Pass the Time of Day, a UK touring exhibition dealing with the relationship between music and 'the everyday'. Pass the Time of Day included works by Arab Strap, Fugazi and Jem Cohen, Mark Leckey, Rodney Graham, Susan Philipsz and Phil Collins amongst others.[20][21][22][23] The following year Rooney's work was selected for the survey show British Art Show 6,[24][25] which toured the UK in 2005–2006. Rooney had solo shows at venues such as Site Gallery, Sheffield (a two-person show with Susan Philipsz, 2003); and Matt's Gallery, London (2008).[26][27][28]

He returned to releasing records in 2007 with the red vinyl 12" Lucy Over Lancashire, on SueMi Records of Berlin, a dub anti-hymn to North West England. Released under his full name of 'Paul Rooney', it was specifically made for broadcast on BBC Radio Lancashire,[29] but BBC Radio 1[30] and BBC 6 Music were amongst the other stations who broadcast the piece (despite it being 16 minutes long), and it reached number 5 in that year's Festive Fifty, now organised by Dandelion Radio.[31][32][33]

2010s[]

In 2012 Rooney had a solo show in the Liverpool Biennial official programme, and later that year, at London's Sunday Art Fair, he launched Dust and Other Stories,[34] a collection of short fiction published by Akerman Daly/Aye-Aye Books.

The Rooney Peel session was repeated in 2016 on Gideon Coe's BBC 6 Music show,[35] and in 2017 Rooney's first album for seventeen years, Futile Exorcise, was released on Owd Scrat Records on transparent vinyl.[36] The album was on Stewart Lee's list of best records of 2017[37] and a track from it, Lost High Street, reached number 1 on the 2017 Dandelion Radio Festive Fifty.[38] Owd Scrat Records was launched by Paul Rooney and other collaborators in 2014, and releases works by artists who are pseudonyms/fictional creations of Rooney himself. It has released work by The Seven Heads of Gog Magog, The Creeping Things and Alain Chamois amongst others.[39]

References[]

  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 12 April 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2014. Retrieved 5 March 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ Cowley, Julian. ‘Cross Platform – sounds in other media: Paul Rooney’. The Wire. January 2010
  4. ^ "Video art beats Lego to prize". 8 October 2003 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  5. ^ "2008 Prize".
  6. ^ [1][dead link]
  7. ^ "Small Talk | Arts Council Collection". www.artscouncilcollection.org.uk.
  8. ^ "Contemporary Art Society website".
  9. ^ [2][dead link]
  10. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved 7 March 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ "BBC - Radio 1 - Keeping It Peel - Festive 50s - 1998". www.bbc.co.uk.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b "Grizedale Arts: Artists & Contributors: Rooney". www.grizedale.org.
  13. ^ [3][dead link]
  14. ^ [4][dead link]
  15. ^ "University of Dundee, Press Release". app.dundee.ac.uk.
  16. ^ [5][dead link]
  17. ^ "Comfortable Rental Life". www.air-artists.org.
  18. ^ [6][dead link]
  19. ^ [7][dead link]
  20. ^ [8][dead link]
  21. ^ Barrett, David. ‘Pass the Time of Day’. Art Monthly. March 2005
  22. ^ Falconer, Morgan. ‘Painting with Sound’. The Times. 22 January 2005
  23. ^ Thatcher, Jennifer. ‘Pass the Time of Day’. Flash Art. January–February 2005
  24. ^ "British Art Show 6". Arnolfini.
  25. ^ [9][dead link]
  26. ^ "Matt's Gallery - Paul Rooney: La Decision Doypack". www.mattsgallery.org.
  27. ^ Milliard, Coline. ‘Paul Rooney, Matt’s Gallery’. Modern Painters. July/August. 2008
  28. ^ Charlesworth, JJ. ‘Paul Rooney, Matt’s Gallery’. Art Review. June/July.
  29. ^ "On The Wire, 01/12/2013". BBC Radio Lancashire. 13 April 2021. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  30. ^ "BBC - Radio 1 - Huw Stephens - Tracklisting". www.bbc.co.uk.
  31. ^ "Dandelion Radio - 2007 Festive 50". dandelionradio.com.
  32. ^ Manchester, Guy (25 October 2012). "Quick Fire John Peel Related Questions To Dandelion Radio DJ's".
  33. ^ Whitby, Mark (15 November 2014). "The Festive Fifty: The Dandelion Radio Years".
  34. ^ "'The treachery of stories and words' – Dust and Other Stories by Paul Rooney". 23 October 2012.
  35. ^ "Gideon Coe track listing".
  36. ^ "Multimedia artist Paul Rooney releases new album - The Wire". The Wire Magazine - Adventures In Modern Music.
  37. ^ Lee, Stewart. "FROM THE METRO-LIB-ELITE DESK OF Stewart Lee Jan 18 : Stewart Lee - 41st Best Standup Ever!". www.stewartlee.co.uk.
  38. ^ "Dandelion Radio - 2017 Festive 50". www.dandelionradio.com.
  39. ^ Bliss, Abi (September 2018). "Alain Chamois, Let Me Take You There". The Wire.

External links[]

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