AFTER
THE PERFORMANCE
Curated
by Paul Carey-Kent and Rosie Gibbens
At Tension Fine Art, 135 Maple Road, Penge to 30 Sept 2023 - Thursday - Saturday
11am - 5pm or by appointment
It’s
tempting to contrast object and performance, but a physical object often
results from a performance, and the making of an object – be it sculpture,
painting, drawings, film etc. – is itself a performance of sorts. ‘After the
Performance’ highlights eight artists whose performative practice leads to a
result that might be categorised differently, and artists whose production,
even if it isn’t categorised as a ‘performance’, carries a strongly
performative element. In all these examples, the indirect presence of the
performance is a significant contributor to the charge generated by the
apparently non-performative result.
Works:
Alice
Anderson: « Technological Dances - Google Smartphone Virtual
Reality Headset », 2023 - gouache on canvas, rain drops, VR mask
in bowl, 151 x 151 cm
Over the past decade, Alice Anderson
has developed an animist approach that advocates a reconnection to nature in
line with ancestral cultures through ritual dance. Initially she ‘memorised’
elements through a performative engagement that records them in copper-coloured thread
– referring to digital connectivity. That has recently led her in a related
direction which also speaks to how contemporary developments challenge the
human connection to the physical world:
- she dances with technological objects as
she animates them to make paintings
- she dances with technological
objects hitting the canvas on the ground creating a political and poetic
gesture
Here Anderson applied the paint
directly onto the virtual reality headset featured in the
installation. That, she says, ‘is an extension of my body. This action refers
to prehistoric times, when humanity was augmented by technology. Human
evolution was made through tools that served as an extension of our bones and
muscles: these tools have amplified our knowledge by increasing and
externalizing our memory outside of the body.’
Matt
Calderwood: Suspension, 2009 –
video, 7 mins 10 secs, Untitled
(Springmount 15th August 2021) and Untitled
(Altarichard 15th June 2023) - Archival inkjet prints, 2023
Matt Calderwood is probably best known for the balancing acts of his sculptures, whether ‘live’ or performing in films such as ‘Suspension’, when the possibility of danger is replaced by the anticipation of a collapse. One could read the arrangements as those of a society: the objects rely on each other for mutual support - and when that fails, all comes crashing down. Calderwood also shows drone-captured images of a junction in Northern Ireland, on which markings appear. Were they made deliberately by the artist as performative drawings, making us the audience? Or were they made by ‘donut’ spins of local youths? If the latter, the ‘drawings’ are the purely contingent results of a different sort of performance: showing off your driving skills and daring, and the intended audience is your mates. Calderwood points out that such activity can be heard for miles around: a sonic performance is also implied by the photographs.
William Cobbing: screensaver, 2022/23 – video, looped
William Cobbing is known for combining
clay and performance, most often by masking his protagonists to striking,
absurd and psychologically ambiguous effect. He has talked of generating
slapstick energy, and inhibiting sight so more attention is given to touch.
‘screensaver’ has a related effect, even though all we see are hands clutching
at a bed of clay to a sound of squelching. That could represent the creative
process of the artist working the material; and the effect is mesmerising if we
concentrate purely on the digital dance. Yet we’re surely likely to wonder
about those involved: have they been maliciously imprisoned, or are they
attempting to escape from the aftermath of an earthquake or a bomb? Are they
reaching futilely for each other? Or might the title’s suggestion that this
forms a backdrop to everything point to humanity’s broader fate, trapped – in a
manner of speaking – by what the Earth will do to us as a result of our own
actions?
Quilla
Constance: Well Hung and Self, 2018/21 - Perspex-mounted
performative photos, 59.4cm x 84.1cm and Intervention, 2023
- framed pencil drawing: 29.7cm x 42cm
Quilla Constance is an interdisciplinary artist of (Black) Jamaican and (White) British heritage who seeks to agitate, amuse, surprise and liberate audiences – all in the course of drawing attention to the absurdity of hegemonic systems which restrict and marginalise BAME, female, LGBTQ+ and working-class identities. Constance grew up in inner-city Birmingham; trained as a disco dancer and cellist; worked on the cabaret theatre circuit for two years; and then studied in the privileged environment of Oxford University. That varied background affords the license, in her words, ‘to cross between established structures… and to highlight what feminist theorists have long asserted – i.e. the performative nature of identity and power.’ Here the images challenge conventional categorisations as she gives the middle finger to the exoticisation / othering she sometimes encounters. ‘Just how much of society is a circus of sorts?’ one might ask ‘Is carnivalesque clowning as much of an art as painting? Is fashion? Does abstract painting operate as a trapeze act?’
Liv Fontaine: Could Have Would Have Should Have, 2023
– pen and pencil on paper
Liv Fontaine made her name with surreal in-your-face feminist rant-narratives, often linked to body issues, and explained ‘How to be a Performance Artist’ in Frieze in 2020. That led her to a distinctive style of densely detailed drawing picking up on the performative themes. In this sequence of five drawings, a film director requires a Liv-like leading lady to undergo a nose job which proves a mere warm-up for 50 years of tyranny, including the widespread destruction of all signs of ancient civilisation to ensure his masterwork’s conviction and dignity. ‘He would stop at nothing’, says Fontaine, ‘to make the perfect film but it was all in vain. Critics hated it, his set caused a natural catastrophe and by the time it was finally released he had forgotten he had directed it. He did like it very much though. It is called Could Have Would Have Should Have and is really about regret.’
Rosie Gibbens: Spite Face, 2023 - Headrest for massage table, fabric, stuffing, thread, rope, elastic, eyelets and Eating Myself, 2023 - 3D printed resin body scan, electric plugs, satin tongue digital print, fabric, stuffing, thread, rope, eyelets
Rosie Gibbens makes performances, videos and sculptures that feature her own body in
various ways as a means of magnifying the absurdities of contemporary life,
saying that ‘I often approach my work as an alien visitor attempting to
participate seamlessly in contemporary life, but not quite managing’. She is
particularly interested in gender performativity, sexual politics, consumer desire
and the slippery overlaps between these, and often approaches her works as
perverse product demonstrations where the term ‘sex sells’ is taken excessively
literally. She shows sewn soft-sculptures that she uses performatively,
but can also operate independently as avatars for her body. ‘Spite Face’
references – while pointedly resisting – the claims of products suggesting how
we should seek the socially-approved forms of self-optimisation. ‘Eating
Myself’ confuses modes of desire to propose the impossible to comically
disturbing effect.
Jenny Klein: ‘Scary Monsters’, 2023 – five photographs with fabric collage, each 32 x 26cm
Jenny Klein spent several years working in theatre before training as an artist. Here she combines her own solo performative actions – captured using a timer and remote control - with embroidered additions. The Scary Monsters series hides most of her: abstract shapes made up of collage and hand-stitched textures leave only the legs in view, as if she’s literally enacting geometric art. But, as Klein says, ‘these legs are still active, caught in motion, awkward, expressive and alive. And the images evoke associations from dance and play to hiding and concealment.’ We’re not scared of these monsters – they look too comical and familiar – but we might also wonder whether the body covered by sewing makes a feminist point? Whether they are for real, or will something or someone else emerge? Would we like to become one – or do we feel like a monster anyway? Klein isn’t answering her questions, but inviting viewers to channel their own experiences into an interpretation.
Graham Silveria Martin: A Portal,
2022 - photographic image transfer and acrylic on found ply screen with brass
hinges with steel chain and lock - 170 x 120 x 20cm
‘A Portal’ stems from Martin’s
research into the cruising territory of the ruined warehouses on New York's
abandoned waterfront in the late 70s and early 80s and the associated art
of such as David Wojnarowicz and Peter Hujar. Connecting with the idea that
time itself was in ruins there, Martin wondered whether we might feel distant
presences, happenings and people more intimately through ‘the performance of
queer utopian memory'. So he documented a series of warehouse rituals with
the aim of accessing the collective experience of a community that was obscured
by the onslaught of AIDS, seeking to reframe personal experiences as a way
of deconstructing ‘the oppressive narratives we have become accustomed to
and internalised, and which remain ingrained in a broader collective
unconscious’. In an exhibition context, the viewer is invited to participate
furtively in the results of his ‘cruising as a research method’.
Anna
Perach: Wandering Pelvis, 2022
- Axminster yarn, faux leather, metal wire and birch wood stand, 168 x 82 x 47cm
and Warrior, 2023 - Axminster yarn,
artificial hair, fabric and birch wood stand 175 x 69 x 32cm
Anna Perach uses hand-tufting to make
carpet textiles which she transforms into sculptures - many of which are
wearable, and can be activated - as these have been through a performance
exploring the liminal space between the self and the other and the tension
between the desire to merge and separate. The Wandering Pelvis plays with
the ancient idea of the womb that moves freely in the woman's body. During the
performance (as in image) the sculpture grows organs and mutates into a living being. As
that suggests, Perach explores the dynamic between personal and cultural myths,
and 'how our private narratives are deeply rooted in ancient storytelling and
folklore and conversely how folklore has the ability to tell us intimate,
confidential stories about ourselves'. These particular works were inspired by
ancient rock carvings found in the Judean desert in Israel, depicting scenes of
hunting, animals and enigmatic abstract shapes.
Production of the works was supported
by Fireflies projects and Goldsmiths CCA.
Katarina
Ranković: Twenty Percent,
2017 - Video, 2 mins 49 secs, and The Story of Room 03, 2023 – Audio, 32
mins 28 secs
Katarina Ranković presents two works
that follow her decade-long practise of entertainingly tweaking philosophical
thought by inhabiting characters. ‘When I enter a state of performance’, she
explains, ‘I feel as though I am returning to my main operating system and
choosing a different application to run on the machine of the self.’ ‘Twenty Percent’ features the implausible yet
telling claim that 20% of all things that happen, do not in fact happen at all.
And ‘The Story of Room 03’ invites us to pull up a chair and listen to what
Ranković describes as ‘a fraught encounter between an artist and a haughty
exhibition space... With only 10 days to go until the scheduled art exhibition,
artist and room cannot see eye to eye on creative matters and risk having
nothing to show to the public. With the artist's reputation, the room's
dignity, and the visitor's satisfaction at stake, unlikely intimacies develop
between the three...’
Prices
available on application
Artists:
Alice
Anderson studied Fine Art at the École nationale supérieure des
Beaux-Arts in Paris and Goldsmiths College, London (MA, 2009), and is
represented by Koenig Gallery, Berlin and Galerie Valérie
Bach, Brussels. Institutional shows include the Stedelijk Museum,
Amsterdam and Centre Pompidou, Paris in 2022. She lives in London.
Matt
Calderwood studied at Sunderland University (BA, 1997). Charles Saatchi
famously purchased an early work - of rope
constructed from 50 rolls of toilet paper. He lives between London and
County Antrim. Northern Ireland.
William
Cobbing studied
at Central Saint Martin’s College and de Ateliers in Amsterdam (2000). He
recently featured at the Whitechapel Gallery and has a solo show 'Social
Substance' at Airspace in Stoke-on-Trent from 23 September. He lives and works
in London.
Quilla
Constance is an interdisciplinary artist, TV personality and Senior
Lecturer in BA Fine Art Sculpture at Camberwell College of Arts. She studied at
The Ruskin School of Art and Goldsmiths. Her solo exhibition ‘Teasing Out
Contingencies’ (Funded by Arts Council England) runs until 7 Jan 2024 at The
Higgins, Bedford - Albertina Campbell's FAD review of that gives an excellent insight into QC's work.
Rosie
Gibbens studied Performance Design and Practice at Central Saint Martins
and Contemporary Art Practice: Performance at the Royal College of Art (MA,
2018) and has performed widely since then. She lives in London.
Liv
Fontaine studied at Chelsea College of Art and Design and Glasgow School
of Art (MLITT Fine Art Performance, 2018). Her performance personae include Viv
Insane and Treacle Fuckface as well as Liv Fontaine. She lives in
Newcastle.
Jenny Klein studied English and Philosophy at Bristol University and Fine Art
at Central Saint Martins (MA 2020), and has worked extensively in theatre and
education. She lives between London and Puglia, Italy.
Graham
Silveria Martin studied at the University of Edinburgh and the Royal College of
Art (MA Painting, 2021). He is a co-founder and director of the South-East
London gallery Trafalgar Avenue. He lives in London.
Anna Perach studied at Bezalel Academy of Arts
and Design, Jerusalem and Goldsmiths, University of London (MFA 2022). She is
represented by Cooke Latham Gallery, London, and has upcoming solo shows at ADA, Rome;
Gasworks, London; and The Lightbox, Woking. She lives in London.
Katarina Ranković studied at Central St Martins and
Goldsmiths College (PhD, 2023). She lives between Cardiff and Glasgow, where
she lectures at the Glasgow School of Art.
From the opening: my photos unless stated
Photo Julian Low - @julianlowepaintings
Photo Ken Turner - @tensepressure