Sublime Dissension: a Working-Class Anti-Pygmalion Aesthetics of the Female Grotesque

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Sublime Dissension: a Working-Class Anti-Pygmalion Aesthetics of the Female Grotesque Middlesex University Research Repository An open access repository of Middlesex University research http://eprints.mdx.ac.uk Hatherley, Frances (2017) Sublime dissension: A working-class Anti-Pygmalion aesthetics of the female grotesque. PhD thesis, Middlesex University. [Thesis] Final accepted version (with author’s formatting) This version is available at: https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/23204/ Copyright: Middlesex University Research Repository makes the University’s research available electronically. Copyright and moral rights to this work are retained by the author and/or other copyright owners unless otherwise stated. The work is supplied on the understanding that any use for commercial gain is strictly forbidden. A copy may be downloaded for personal, non-commercial, research or study without prior permission and without charge. Works, including theses and research projects, may not be reproduced in any format or medium, or extensive quotations taken from them, or their content changed in any way, without first obtaining permission in writing from the copyright holder(s). They may not be sold or exploited commercially in any format or medium without the prior written permission of the copyright holder(s). Full bibliographic details must be given when referring to, or quoting from full items including the author’s name, the title of the work, publication details where relevant (place, publisher, date), pag- ination, and for theses or dissertations the awarding institution, the degree type awarded, and the date of the award. If you believe that any material held in the repository infringes copyright law, please contact the Repository Team at Middlesex University via the following email address: [email protected] The item will be removed from the repository while any claim is being investigated. See also repository copyright: re-use policy: http://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/policies.html#copy Sublime Dissension: A Working-Class Anti-Pygmalion Aesthetics of the Female Grotesque A Thesis submitted to Middlesex University in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Frances Hatherley Middlesex University Department of Visual Arts, Faculty of Arts and Creative Industries August 2017 1 Abstract This thesis reclaims and refigures negative stereotypical images of working-class femininity, proposing an “Anti-Pygmalion” aesthetics (referencing Shaw’s Pygmalion) in which pressure to conform to bourgeois notions of respectability is refused in favour of holding onto aspects of working-class female identity which have been treated as faulty and shameful. It examines a previously under-theorised dimension of the “female grotesque”: its formation under a process of classed construction. Contesting the disavowal of class identity in much art writing, I explore how it shapes art reception, showing how images of the Anti-Pygmalion female grotesque can provoke sublime experiences in viewers who share an empathetic connection with the work’s presentation of class difference. Against Enlightenment aesthetic theories which associate the sublime with the lofty, this thesis conceptualises it from the perspective of working-class women, connecting it with an excitement and awe that comes from below and bursts up and out. My approach is auto-ethnographic, drawing on my experiences as a woman from a working-class background to deepen my readings and address gaps in the field. To counter the erasure of working-class artists, I focus on work by working-class British artists and filmmakers from the 1980s – 2000s. Exploring the problematic experiences of working-class artists and writers in the institutional spaces of education and the art world, I highlight the resulting internalisation of stigmatised subjectivities. This frames my analysis of three case studies, each addressing aspects of working-class femininity: Jo Spence’s Class-Shame series, the photographs collected in Richard Billingham’s Ray’s a Laugh, and Carol Morley’s film The Alcohol Years. My analysis builds up a dialogue around Anti-Pygmalion aesthetics which forces a reconsideration of the categories of the sublime and the grotesque in the light of working-class identities and creativities, dispelling stereotypes which have hampered existing criticism, and reframing working-class stories and lives as significant and valuable. 2 Acknowledgements Thanks first and foremost to my inspiring and staunch feminist supervisors Katy Deepwell and Hilary Robinson, whose support, understanding and example encouraged me to produce the best work I could. Thanks to Middlesex University for funding three years of research. I’m grateful to Anne Massey and Catherine Dormor, who separately encouraged me to write in my own voice and to put myself into the research. Thanks go to Terry Dennett, and Carol Morley for taking the time to talk to me about their work. Thanks to Patrizia di Bello at The Jo Spence Memorial Library at Birkbeck for keeping Spence’s legacy alive, and for providing me with an ongoing research home. During my BA I benefited from the support and encouragement of teachers and mentors from Queen Mary University of London, in particular Sue Harris, Will McMorran, Lucy Bolton and Elza Adamovich, who provided me with the base of positive experience from which I was then able to take on the challenge of starting a PhD. Thanks to Klara Hallen for support and friendship during much of this time. Thanks to my brother Owen Hatherley, for a lifetime of conversations about class, and for helpful feedback on this project. Thanks to my father Steve Hatherley for being an inspiring example of the tradition of working-class intellectual autodidactism. Thanks to James and Liz Hatherley for always rooting for me. Special thanks to Paul Frankl, Chloe Adams, Florence Harvey, Pippa Selby and Stef Jewitt for endlessly believing in me. Love and gratitude to my patient husband Dominic Fox for keeping me going during the difficult parts of doing this work, and for proof-reading the thesis, being my sounding board and best comrade. Dedication Dedicated in gratitude, love and respect to my mother Maggie Fricker, without whose unfailing strength, encouragement and support this thesis would not have been possible. 3 Table of Contents Abstract ....................................................................................................................................... 2 Acknowledgements................................................................................................................... 3 Dedication ................................................................................................................................ 3 Illustrations .............................................................................................................................. 7 Introduction................................................................................................................................. 8 The Pygmalion .......................................................................................................................... 8 Historiography ........................................................................................................................ 11 Phenomenology and Subject Position ...................................................................................... 13 Auto-Ethnographic Approaches ............................................................................................... 16 A Conception of Class as a Political “Structure of Feeling” ......................................................... 17 The Case Studies ........................................................................................................................ 18 Jo Spence ............................................................................................................................... 19 Richard Billingham .................................................................................................................. 19 Carol Morley........................................................................................................................... 20 Chapter One: Methodologies, Concepts and Frameworks............................................................ 22 Women, Class, The Grotesque and The Sublime ....................................................................... 22 The Grotesque ........................................................................................................................ 23 The Female Grotesque ............................................................................................................ 26 A Feminist Sublime ................................................................................................................. 28 Chapter Two: Working-Class Stories Matter ................................................................................ 36 Theories of Class ..................................................................................................................... 36 The Turn Away from Class ....................................................................................................... 37 Identity Politics ................................................................................................................... 37 Categories of Working-Class Meaning ...................................................................................... 38 Subjective Experiences of Having a Working-Class Identity .......................................................
Recommended publications
  • Diminishing Connections Mary Jane King Clemson University, M.J [email protected]
    Clemson University TigerPrints All Theses Theses 5-2016 Diminishing Connections Mary Jane King Clemson University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/all_theses Recommended Citation King, Mary Jane, "Diminishing Connections" (2016). All Theses. 2369. https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/all_theses/2369 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses at TigerPrints. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Theses by an authorized administrator of TigerPrints. For more information, please contact [email protected]. DIMINISHING CONNECTIONS ___________________________________________________ A Thesis Presented to the Graduate School Of Clemson University ___________________________________________________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Fine Arts Visual Art ___________________________________________________ by Mary Jane King May 2016 ___________________________________________________ Accepted by: Professor Todd McDonald, Committee Chair Professor Kathleen Thum Professor Todd Anderson Dr. Andrea Feeser ABSTRACT I explore our skin’s durability as it protects our inner being, but its fragility in our death. Paint allows me to understand the physical quality of skin and the structure underneath it’s surface. We experience the world and one another through this outermost layer of our selves, providing the ability to feel touch and to establish corporeal bounds and connections. Skin provides a means of communication and interaction, of touch and intimacy. It contains, protects, and stretches with the growth of the body, adapting to the interior bodily demands. It is through this growth that there is also a regression or a slow decay of the body. In addition to exterior exploration, I also investigate the vitality of our viscera even when disease destroys it and claims our lives.
    [Show full text]
  • BFI Film Fund
    BFI FILM FUND FILMS 2013/14 20,000 DAYS ON EARTH 45 YEARS ’71 ALAN PARTRIDGE: ALPHA PAPA BELLE BROKEN BROOKLYN BYPASS CATCH 05 ME DADDY CALVARY THE COMEDIAN CUBAN FURY DARK HORSE THE DOUBLE THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY ELECTRICITY EXHIBITION THE FALLING FRANK FOR ISSUE 1 THOSE IN PERIL GET SANTA GONE TOO FAR THE GOOB SPRING/SUMMER 2014 HALF OF A YELLOW SUN HOW I LIVE NOW HYENA 06 04 MIKE LEIGH INREALLIFE THE INVISIBLE WOMAN JIMMY’S HALL THE On Cannes and filmmaking 05 STEPHEN BERESFORD AND LAST DAYS ON MARS THE LAST PASSENGER THE LOUISE OSMOND LOBSTER LE WEEK-END MISTER JOHN MR. TURNER Bringing real life to the big screen ROBOT OVERLORDS A PERVERT’S GUIDE TO IDEOLOGY 06 PETER STRICKLAND On experience, insecurity and PHILOMENA PRIDE QUEEN & COUNTRY REMAINDER THE not knowing 08 RIOT CLUB SECOND COMING THE SELFISH GIANT SHELL 08 DREAM WORLD SLOW WEST SPIKE ISLAND THE SPIRIT OF ’45 A STORY Creating Carol Morley’s The Falling 10 HOME SWEET HOME OF CHILDREN & FILM THE STUART HALL PROJECT Filmmaking outside the big smoke SUFFRAGETTE SUNSET SONG SUNSHINE ON LEITH UNDER THE SKIN WELCOME TO THE PUNCH X PLUS Y 10 CoveR image: CaRol moRley, Photo By Paul maRC mitChell BFI Film Fund Welcome... to the first edition of BFI Film Fund Filmmakers, an up close and personal look at a number of filmmakers who have recently been As the largest public film fund in the UK, the BFI Lottery Film Fund develops, supports and supported by the BFI Film Fund, and films that are just coming into view.
    [Show full text]
  • PRESS RELEASE Face Time: an Exhibition in Aid of the Art Room
    PRESS RELEASE Face Time: An exhibition in aid of The Art Room Threadneedle Space, Mall Galleries, London SW1 Monday 16 – Saturday 21 June 2014 10 am – 5 pm, Free Admission Over 60 works of art by international leading artists will be offered for sale in aid of The Art Room in Face Time, a week-long exhibition at the Threadneedle Space, Mall Galleries, London, SW1. Working in partnership with the Threadneedle Foundation, The Art Room, a national charity offering art as a therapeutic intervention to children and young people, have invited artists to contribute a clock or original piece of work for this important fundraising exhibition. Painters, sculptors, illustrators, architects and photographers have all contributed to Face Time and many have chosen to produce a clock face which reflects a key element of The Art Room’s methodology and practice. Face Time artists include: Emma Alcock ▪ Nicola Bayley ▪ Paul Benney ▪ Alison Berrett ▪ Tess Blenkinsop ▪ Anthony Browne ▪ Sarah Campbell ▪ Jake & Dinos Chapman ▪ Lauren Child ▪ Robert James Clarke ▪ Lara Cramsie ▪ Martin Creed ▪ Miranda Creswell ▪ Emma Faull ▪ Eleanor Fein ▪ Jennie Foley ▪ Antony Gormley ▪ Nicola Gresswell ▪ David Anthony Hall ▪ Maggi Hambling ▪ Kevin Harman ▪ The Art Room (Oxford) Oxford Spires Academy, Glanville Road, Oxford OX4 2AU (Registered Address) T 01865 779779 E [email protected] W www.theartroom.org.uk Founder Director Juli Beattie Chair Jonathan Lloyd Jones Patrons Micaela Boas, Anthony Browne, His Honour Judge Nicholas Browne QC, Dr Mina Fazel, MRCPsych
    [Show full text]
  • Londra Al Centro Dell Scena Artistica: La Yung British Art Dalla Conferenza Del 12-05-2011 Del Prof
    Londra al centro dell scena artistica: La Yung British Art Dalla conferenza del 12-05-2011 del prof. Francesco Poli a cura del prof. Mario Diegol i Sensation e la YBA (Young British Artists) Il 28 dicembre del 1997 presso la Royal Academy of Art di Londra il collezionista d’arte contemporanea Charles Saatchi organizza la mostra Sensation in cui espone le opere della Yung British Art. La mostra è, in seguito, riproposta a Berl ino e New York e diventa, grazie all’abilità manageriale di Saatchi e alla sua rete di contatt i sviluppata negl i anni precedenti con la sua att ività di pubbl icitario, l’evento artistico del momento e un riferimento importante per il mercato dell’arte portando alla ribalta una serie di giovani art isti inglesi come: Jake & Dinos Chapman, Adam Chodzko, Mat Coll ishaw, Tracey Emin, Marcus Harvey, Damien Hirst, Gary Hume, Michael Landy, Abigail Lane, Sarah Lucas, Chris Ofil i, Richard Patterson, Simon Patterson, Marc Quinn, Fiona Rae, Sam Taylor-Wood, Gavin Turk, Gill ian Wearing, Rachel Whiteread. Gl i artist i della Yung British Art propongono opere che sol itamente tendono a stupire e a provocare lo spettatore. Sono giovani nati negl i anni sessanta che impiegano linguaggi differenti non sempre omologabil i alle tradizional i espressioni plastiche e visive anche se ne recuperano a volte i material i (la pittura, la scultura in marmo) mischiandoli o alternandol i all’impiego di oggetti, fotograf ie, material i plastici, stoffe ecc.. Il manifesto della mostra Sensation con cui evocano e amplificano storie personal i e collettive dove il soggetto e il contenuto prevalgono sulla forma: una forma a volte iperreal istica, in altri casi mostruosa e raccapricciante ampl ificata da dimensioni che possono assumere una scala monumentale.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2018/2019
    Annual Report 2018/2019 Section name 1 Section name 2 Section name 1 Annual Report 2018/2019 Royal Academy of Arts Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, W1J 0BD Telephone 020 7300 8000 royalacademy.org.uk The Royal Academy of Arts is a registered charity under Registered Charity Number 1125383 Registered as a company limited by a guarantee in England and Wales under Company Number 6298947 Registered Office: Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, W1J 0BD © Royal Academy of Arts, 2020 Covering the period Coordinated by Olivia Harrison Designed by Constanza Gaggero 1 September 2018 – Printed by Geoff Neal Group 31 August 2019 Contents 6 President’s Foreword 8 Secretary and Chief Executive’s Introduction 10 The year in figures 12 Public 28 Academic 42 Spaces 48 People 56 Finance and sustainability 66 Appendices 4 Section name President’s On 10 December 2019 I will step down as President of the Foreword Royal Academy after eight years. By the time you read this foreword there will be a new President elected by secret ballot in the General Assembly room of Burlington House. So, it seems appropriate now to reflect more widely beyond the normal hori- zon of the Annual Report. Our founders in 1768 comprised some of the greatest figures of the British Enlightenment, King George III, Reynolds, West and Chambers, supported and advised by a wider circle of thinkers and intellectuals such as Edmund Burke and Samuel Johnson. It is no exaggeration to suggest that their original inten- tions for what the Academy should be are closer to realisation than ever before. They proposed a school, an exhibition and a membership.
    [Show full text]
  • Good Practice
    GOOD PRACTICE Negotiating your practice £5.00 GOOD PRACTICE NEGOTIATING YOUR PRACTICE Edited Gillian Nicol CONTENTS Publisher Louise Wirz Design www.axisgraphicdesign.co.uk Introduction 3 © writers, artists and a-n The Artists Information Company 2006 The Bata-ville project 4 ISBN 0 907730 72 8 Published by Public art and compromise 6 a-n The Artists Information Company Registered in England Company No 1626331 Expectations and responsibilities 8 Registered address First Floor, 7-15 Pink Lane, Newcastle upon Tyne The artist-curator dynamic 9 NE1 5DW UK +44 (0) 191 241 8000 [email protected] Public commission 10 www.a-n.co.uk Copyright Critical context for practice 12 Individuals may copy this publication for the limited purpose of use in their business or professional Social spaces 13 practice. Organisations wishing to copy or use the publication for multiple purposes should contact the Publisher for permission. Negotiating a better rate of pay 14 a-n The Artists Information Company’s publications and programmes are enabled by artists who form Join a-n 15 our largest stakeholder group, contributing some £340K annually in subscription income, augmented by revenue funds from Arts Council England, and Publications 16 support for specific projects from Esmée Fairbairn Foundation. Anne Brodie, untitled, glass and white china clay, 2003. ‘Artists and Writers’ in Antarctica is a scheme that is jointly run by Arts Council England and the British Antarctic Survey. Anne Brodie will be one of two resident artists in Antarctica as part of this scheme from December 2006 – February 2007. “My work usually involves lots of hot glass, film and photography.
    [Show full text]
  • November 2013 Free Entry Hurvin Anderson Reporting Back
    Programme September – November 2013 www.ikon-gallery.co.uk Free entry Hurvin Anderson reporting back Exhibition 25 September – 10 November 2013 First and Second Floor Galleries Ikon presents the most comprehensive exhibition to as ‘slightly outside of things’. Later paintings of the date of paintings by Birmingham-born artist Hurvin Caribbean embody this kind of perception with Anderson (born 1965), evoking sensations of being verdant green colour glimpsed behind close-up caught between one place and another, drawn from details of the fences and security grilles found in personal experience. It surveys the artist’s career, residential areas, or an expanse of water or desolate including work made while at the Royal College of approach separating us, the viewer, from the point Art, London, in 1998, through the acclaimed Peter’s of interest in the centre ground. 1 series, inspired by his upbringing in Birmingham’s Afro-Caribbean community, and ongoing works Anderson’s method of composition signifies at arising out of time spent in Trinidad in 2002. Filling once a kind of social and political segregation, a 2 Ikon’s entire exhibition space, reporting back traces the smartness with respect to the business of picture development of Anderson’s distinct figurative style. making, amounting to a kind of semi-detached apprehension of what he encounters. Anderson arrived on the international art scene with Peter’s, an ongoing series of paintings depicting the A catalogue accompanies the exhibition priced interiors of barbers’ shops, in particular one (owned £20, special exhibition price £15. It includes an essay by Peter Brown) visited by Anderson with his father by Jennifer Higgie, writer and co-editor of Frieze.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapman for the Duo’S Retrospective in Istanbul Which Had Been on Display During 10/2/2017-7/5/2017
    This article was commissioned by the art gallery ARTER (Istanbul, Turkey) and the artists Jake & Dinos Chapman for the duo’s retrospective in Istanbul which had been on display during 10/2/2017-7/5/2017. For further information on the show, please click here. Reviewed by the artists and the editors of the exhibition monograph, this essay was originally written in English. Both the English original and the Turkish translation was published in this monograph. In line with the commissioning brief, the article attempts to provide a critical review of the Chapmans’ art practice while also locating the duo’s artworks within an original theoretical framework. Jake & Dinos Chapman ANLAMSIZLIK ÂLEMİNDE — IN THE REALM OF THE SENSELESS CHAPMAN 23-01-17.indd 3 23.01.2017 17:59 Jake & Dinos Chapman Anlamsızlık Âleminde In the Realm of the Senseless Genel Yayın Yönetmeni | Editor-in-Chief Bu yayın, Jake ve Dinos Chapman’ın Arter’de 10 Şubat–7 Mayıs İlkay Baliç 2017 tarihleri arasında gerçekleşen “Anlamsızlık Âleminde” adlı sergisine eşlik etmektedir. Editör | Editor Süreyyya Evren This book accompanies Jake and Dinos Chapman’s exhibition “In the Realm of the Senseless” held at Arter between İngilizceden Türkçeye çeviri 10 February and 7 May 2017. Translation from English to Turkish Süreyyya Evren [12-15] Anlamsızlık Âleminde Özge Çelik - Orhan Kılıç [22-27] In the Realm of the Senseless Zafer Aracagök [34-45] Jake & Dinos Chapman Münevver Çelik - Sinem Özer [60-75] 10/02–07/05/2017 Küratör | Curator: Nick Hackworth Türkçe düzelti | Turkish proofreading Emre Ayvaz Teşekkürler | Acknowledgements İngilizce düzelti | English proofreading Hussam Otaibi Anna Knight ve tüm Floreat ekibi | and everyone at Floreat John McEnroe Gallery Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Archives Fine Books Catalogue 12
    ARCHIVES FINE BOOKS CATALOGUE 12 2020 rom early March 2020, Catalogue 12 was never a certainty. We held our breath and watched as events were cancelled and postponed, including the ANZAAB Antiquarian and Rare Book Fairs. But in the slowing and stilling of those weeks and months something lovely happened: Archives FFine People called and ordered books or bought them through our website, and many booked appointments for quiet, socially distant browsing. Dedicated book collectors kept collecting books and others discovered they loved books too. We didn’t acquire much stock in this period, but when we were offered a small collection of mid-to-late twentieth century illustrated and signed items we were feeling cheery and hopeful, took them on, and Catalogue 12 came into being. Between the covers you will find John and Yoko, Ray Bradbury, Three Dog Night, Harvey Kurtzman, Jenny Saville and more. True to form we have tucked a little William Blake in the mix on pp. 6 & 17. We hope you enjoy browsing and if we can reserve something special for you please let us know. Dawn & Hamish. Front Cover: Ono, Yoko. Grapefruit. New York: ARCHIVES FINE BOOKS PTY LTD Sphere, 1971. First Thus. SIGNED BY YOKO ONO AND JOHN LENNON. (# 1263). Details p. 4. 40 CHARLOTTE STREET, BRISBANE, QUEENSLAND, 4000 ‡ +61 7 3221 0491 Back Cover: Detail from SAVILLE, Jenny. Jenny Saville. New York: Rizzoli International Publications, [email protected] Inc., 2005. First Edition. SIGNED. Details p. 15. www.archivesfinebooks.com.au 2 The John Lennon Letters; Edited and with an Introduction by Hunter Davies.
    [Show full text]
  • Richard Billingham Writer/Director
    Richard Billingham Writer/Director Richard is a Turner Prize-shortlisted artist and photographer who has also been working for many years on film and video, including the acclaimed BBC documentary FISHTANK and the art installation ZOO. Richard won the Douglas Hickox Award for best new director at the 2018 BIFAs for RAY & LIZ, his searing, brilliant portrayal of dysfunctional but deeply human working-class life and has been nominated for a National Film Award for best director and a BAFTA for Outstanding Debut. Film 2020 AT HAWTHORNE TIME Writer/Director Adaptation of the novel by Melissa Harrison in Development with the BFI 2018 RAY & LIZ Writer/Director Produced by Jacqui Davies in association with Severn Screen Starring Michelle Bonnard, Richard Ashton BAFTA Nomination, Ray & Liz, Best Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer National Film Awards UK Nomination, Ray & Liz, Best Director Douglas Hickox Award, Best Debut Director, Ray & Liz, British Independent Film IWC Schaffhausen Filmmaker Bursary Award in association with the BFI Special Mention, Ray & Liz, Locarno Film Festival Silver Star Award for Narrative Film, Ray & Liz, El Gouna Film Festival, Egypt Golden Alexander Award, Best Film, Ray & Liz, Thessaloniki Film Festival Best Film & Best Actress, Ray & Liz, Batumi International Art House Film Festival Grand Jury Award, Ray & Liz, Seville Film Festival Grand Jury Award, Best Director, Ray & Liz, Lisbon and Sintra Film Festival Special Mention, Ray & Liz, Festival Du Nouveau Cinema, Montreal Wakelin Award, Glynn Vivian Gallery, Swansea Creative Wales Award Documentaries 1998 FISHTANK Commissioned by ArtAngel and Adam Curtis for BBC Television New York Video Festival Visions Du Reel - Festival international de cinema, Nyon, Switzerland 11th International Film Festival of Marseille Electric Cinema, Birmingham, UK Diagonale Festival of Austrian Film International Film Festival, Rotterdam Broadcast on Arte, France Selected Bibliography Patrick Gamble, ‘Ray & Liz, Richard Billingham’, Kinoscope, 28th Dec.
    [Show full text]
  • London Gallery Map Summer 2018 Galleriesnow.Net for Latest Info Visit Galleriesnow.Net
    GalleriesNow.net for latest info visit GalleriesNow.net London Gallery Map Summer 2018 21 Jun Impressionist & A Blain|Southern 5E Modern Works on Paper Flowers Gallery, Luxembourg & Dayan 6F Partners & Mucciaccia 6G Repetto Gallery 5F S Simon Lee 5G Sotheby’s S|2 Gallery 5E Victoria Miro Mayfair 5E Kingsland Road 3A Achille Salvagni 28 Jun Handpicked: 50 Sadie Coles HQ ITION Atelier 5F Works Selected by the S Davies Street 5F SUPERIMPO Saatchi Gallery SITION SUPERIMPO 28 Jun Post-War to Present Land of Lads, Land of Lashes 30 Jun–12 Jul Classic Week Upstairs: Charlotte ‘Snapshot’ Aftermath: Art in the Wake of 25 Jun–11 Aug 3 Jul Old Master & British Johannesson 29 Jun–1 Jul World War One Edward Kienholz: America Drawings & Watercolours Ely House, 37 Dover St, 25 May–30 Jun René Magritte (Or: The Rule Superimposition | Paul Michele Zaza Viewing Room: Joel Mesler: Signals 5 Jun–23 Sep Surface Work 28 Cork St, W1S 3NG Morrison, Barry Reigate, My Hometown Lorenzo Vitturi: Money Must W1S 4NJ of Metaphor) 18 May–15 Jun The Alphabet of Creation 27 Apr–13 Jul 11 Apr–16 Jun 4 Jul Treasured Portraits 1-2 Warner Yard, EC1R 5EY 10am-6pm mon-fri, 11am- Michael Stubbs, Mark (for now) Millbank, SW1P 4RG 18 May–14 Jul from the Collection of Ernst Be Made 10am-6pm tue-sat 27 Feb–26 May Apollo 11am-6pm wed-fri, 4pm sat Titchner Nudes 20 Apr–26 May 31 St George St, W1S 2FJ 10am-6pm daily Erkka Nissinen Holzscheiter 11 May–30 Jun 2 Savile Row, W1S 3PA 15 Mar–7 Sep noon-5pm sat 15 Jun–31 Aug 11 Apr–26 May 10am-5pm mon-fri 23 May–14 Jul 5 Jul Old Masters Evening
    [Show full text]
  • Press Release
    Institute of Contemporary Arts PRESS RELEASE ICA Artists’ Editions + Paul Stolper Gallery 12 January – 16 February 2019 Opening Friday 11 January, 6–8pm Paul Stolper Gallery Frances Stark, Proposal for a Peace Poster, 2017. Silkscreen print with deboss elements, 67 × 67 cm, Edition of 10 (2AP) ICA Artists’ Editions and Paul Stolper Gallery collaborate for the first time to present a joint exhibition of artists’ editions at Paul Stolper Gallery, opening 12 January 2019. The exhibition showcases a collection of rare editions from Peter Blake, Adam Chodzko, Mat Collishaw, Keith Coventry, Jeremy Deller, Brian Eno, Marcus Harvey, Jenny Holzer, Roger Hiorns, Gary Hume, Sarah Lucas, Vinca Petersen, Peter Saville, Bob and Roberta Smith, Frances Stark, Gavin Turk and Cerith Wyn Evans. The exhibition provides an opportunity to view a selection of important editions from the last 40 years: from Peter Blake’s Art Jak, commissioned by the ICA in 1978 to raise funds for the institution, to Jeremy Deller’s iconic and catalysing print The History of the World, published by Paul Stolper in 1998, to Jenny Holzer’s pivotal Inflammatory Essays, first fly-posted around New York in the late 1970s and then created as an edition for the ICA in 1993. www.ica.art The Mall London SW1Y 5AH +44 (0)20 7930 0493 Tracking the course of editions produced by ground-breaking artists such as Cerith Wyn Evans and Sarah Lucas, the exhibition explores the potential of the format and the numerous ways that artists have engaged with the editioning method of creation. The exhibition is inspired by conversations between Paul Stolper, Stefan Kalmár (ICA Director) and Charlotte Barnard (ICA Artists’ Editions) on the radical history and potential of the editioned artwork, which can free the artist from the demands of their primary practice or gallery expectations.
    [Show full text]