20.8.12

Classifieds at SIA Gallery, Sheffield - until 23 Sep


My recent show - Classified - at SIA Gallery in Sheffield, opening last Thursday.

Thanks for Sheffield Institute of Arts, all the participating artists, and those who came to show :)








The ubiquity of information and data in our daily lives is pervasive, but we rarely question its nature and origin. The messages presented to us, are they truthful? How are they selected and classified? Who filters and controls them? And who has the authority to decide which information is worth seeing or preserving it?
The exhibition includes five UK-based artists, Estefani Bouza, Ting-Ting Cheng, David Penny, Marianna and Daniel O'Reilly, using photography, video and installation to explore and interpret the use of codified language in everyday life, challenging the authorized subjects and the way they categorize messages. In the artworks, the artists imitate the selecting, presenting and receiving process used by museums, libraries and mass media to raise questions related with classified information.
Estéfani Bouza's project Collection consists of fifteen photographs. Each of these images depicts legumes, nuts or raisins, which are enumerated. In the first picture of the project, one thousand and one items appear in the image, and in each photograph of the series one more is added. Each element shown is classified and ordered in reference to the recollection process used in the land notebooks of the XIX century.
The different elements are presented as catalogued specimens for analysis and observation in a way that indicates their significance, but it is also through this mechanism of representation that the ideology of the museums and the prerequisites of their collections are exposed and questioned.
Ting-Ting Cheng's I judge a book by its cover explores the relationships between language, identity and foreignness. In the project, She borrowed books of foreign languages from a library, and photographed the side of them in piles. Apart from the clue in the titles, the viewers cannot tell what language the books belong to. Language, in our society, works as a selection mechanism. It selects audience, deciding who would be able to read the books. By randomly choosing books of the language the artist cannot understand, Cheng positioned herself as a ‘cultural outsider’, that ‘she judged a book by its cover’, which signifying the distance between different cultures and how nationality/identity influence the way people judge others in our society.
David Penny's The Ship and the Nose was initiated through a residency at Manchester Central Library: the artist was invited to make a piece of work as the huge collection of the libraries archive was moved from its home to be temporarily re-housed in a local salt mine. From looking for remnants of objects and scraps of paper in bins, amongst dusty corners and under sets of shelves, things are given a new narrative potential. The library contains knowledge that is provisionally ordered and classified, waiting to be found again and processed in a new context. The same approach has been taken with these lost objects, they are found, re-ordered and grouped for display. Since working in the library Penny has developed the work to incorporate new imagery, responding to a sense of a narrative journey that the Ship and the Nose has come to represent. There becomes scope for movement of the imagination between the groupings of objects and images and an archive is re-built, re-interpreted.
Marianna and Daniel O'Reilly's Longbridge is a mock-documentary video about an incident which never happened. The artists used Google Earth to plan the entire shoot of the video from their home in London. Locations were mapped-out, and the set-pieces were planned. The artists also went to Copenhagen and executed the shoot disguised as tourists with an entirely virtual, minutely-planned itinerary. The subject of the film was drawn from Copenhagen’s famous son Søren Kierkegaard, who wrote at length about the serious moral implications of leading ‘the aesthetic life’. By throwing this criticism into the entirely aesthetic experience of the tourist, the artists attempted to flush out new experiences to be had from the old, treating cliché and truism as fertile, rather than barren soil. To then round this experience off, the O’Reilly's then posted images from the film back onto the locations on Google Earth, disseminating covert experience through the channels of distribution.

http://www.shu.ac.uk/sia/gallery/events/event.html?id=81

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