I am taking part in Buffer Zone exhibition in Armory Gallery in Sydney Olympic Park. I made a new installation called Still live on the site using 1200 kilos of fresh clay. The exhibition is on from 7th May to 31st July 2011. Read more about the work here.
February 2011 Exhibitions
The Society of Scottish Artists Annual Exhibition
I am participating the SSA 2011 exhibition as an Invited Graduate Artist with work Some people knit.
The Royal Scottish Academy Building
The Mound, Edinburgh
Exhibition Open
Saturday 5th February – Thursday 3rd March
Monday – Saturday 10am – 5pm, Sunday 12pm – 5pm
Link to The Society of Scottish Artists website
Image published in The Herald 4 Feb 2011.
Master Jam
New MFA students of the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts
Galleria Fafa
Lönnrotinkatu 35, Helsinki
Exhibition open 5th February – 20th February, Mon – Sun 11am – 6pm
Image:
Pia Männikkö, Déjà Vu, 2011, fabric and ink
Mona Hatoum Workshop
I took part in a workshop run by Mona Hatoum in Santander, Spain in July 2010. There were 15 participating artists from around the world. We had Fundación Marcelino Botín´s beautiful Villa Iris in our use for two weeks. The aim was to work with ideas in discussion with others rather than endeavoring to make finished works.
Circle, 2010
Chalk drawing in the garden canope of Villa Iris
Carpet, 2010
Rearranged wood slat carpet, two versions
Open doors event on the last evening of the workshop
The Glasgow School of Art Degree Show 2010
My space in GSA Degree Show is in the Mackintosh building basement studio 11. I am showing two works: Some people knit that is made of masking tape and Still live, an installation of unfired clay. The show is running from 12th to 19th of June. Welcome!
Article about the degree show in The Skinny
28 June 2010
“Pia Männikkö’s huge sponge-like sculpture, delicately crafted from tiny masking tape funnels, and her ambitious installation that sees her cover an entire studio floor with clay, textured by the tread of her own feet, are breathtaking successes heightened by their popularity with the general public. Our relationship to space and volume are key elements to Männikkö’s projects and her work should definitely not be missed. The clay floor is particularly striking and original, maintaining the fun, childlike quality prevalent throughout the degree show.”
Read the full article: Melting Pot: GSA Degree Show
Degree Show review at Newbloodart.com
21 June 2010
“Deservedly receiving a great deal of attention, it graces the degree show’s press, is Pia Mannikko’s visually astounding and tactile sculpture of indistinct weight which invites analogies of everything from coral, to rock formations, to honeycomb, to stomach lining. In an interesting decision it is curiously supported and elevated by metal rods that themselves seem to be weighing it down. The ambiguous title ‘Some People Knit’ is, like the sculpture, beautifully poised: between soft self-congratulation and rueful apology – either at dedication rewarded or compulsiveness uncontrolled – the sculpture is made out of masking tape. A diligence we can’t help but be awed by. Mannikko’s other piece, a floor installation made of clay, and scarred by the movements of her own bare feet, also hint at the process of making over time. There is some defiance in her choice of material, humble in origin but elegant in outcome, that speaks of an ability to reside in any contemporary art space, with the grace of an Eva Hesse or Cornelia Parker.”
Read the full article: Review of the Glasgow School of Art Degree Show
The Scotsman Art Review
“Pia Männikkö’s giant honeycomb made of masking tape, both visually arresting and highly tactile, is a large-scale sculpture made in a hands-on, painstaking way. She calls it Some People Knit. Her other work is a floor installation made of clay, marked by the actions of her own bare feet (and now The Scotsman photographer’s shoes – sorry, Pia) and left to crack and dry.”
Read the full article: Art review: Undergraduate Degree Show | MFA Degree Show
Evening Times Degree Show Article
10 June 2010
“It may resemble coral from the sea but Pia Mannikko’s innovative work is made entirely from masking tape. The honeycombed creation, entitled Some People Knit and which took the Finnish-born art student eight months to complete, is part of the students’ degree show at Glasgow School of Art. And Pia says she may develop the piece further in the future by adding more tape. In other work at the show, Pia used toe-prints and other body parts to form a pattern in clay.”
(Full article no longer online)













