
Event
SLAM Friday at Enclave - previews, performances, screenings and soundings + after party
27 Mar 2015
Enclave Projects
London, United Kingdom
28 March - 11 April 2015
Preview 27 March 6-9pm
DJ set from BAD SECTOR 9-11pm
Free
A new series of medium format, analogue photo-collages by Josephine Callaghan is the first project to emerge from Res.
Akhal-Teke
Josephine Callaghan
28 March - 11 April 2015
Preview 27 March 6-9pm
DJ set from BAD SECTOR 9-11pm
A passage cutting through the landscape, smudged with birthmarks, speaks of the settlement and migrations of matter and peoples. Spliced and nonspecific, the scene feels native for only an instant. This impermanence of territorial identity offers a deep time perspective on #temporarycustodian’s ongoing research into an apparent quickening of flow that demands holding without owning. Temporary occupation is an ancient narrative now sold as a progressive future. This habitual return to a perishable lease confirms the illusory nature of claims for permanent land and resource tenure.
Josephine Callaghan (b. London, 1984) is a London based artist working with photography and sculpture. She graduated from the Royal College of Art's Sculpture MA programme in July 2014 and is currently Sculpture fellow at School of the Arts, University of Northampton. Her recent shows include ‘Compassion Fatigue’ New Wight Biennial UCLA Los Angeles, ‘X’ (solo), Lima Zulu, ‘Mild Translation’ Jupiter Woods, ‘Dizziness of Freedom’, Bermondsey Project Space (all London 2014), ‘Self Interruption’, Jack Chiles Gallery, (New York 2013), ‘Four Scenarios’, Bermondsey Project Space and ‘Mutagen’, ASC Gallery, (both London 2013), and ‘Thrall’dom’, Lima Zulu, (London 2012).
‘Akhal-Teke’ is the first exhibition emerging from Res.- a mutable project working out of a gallery and studio in Deptford, South East London. Res. seeks to be an associative working environment from which to share and develop research. Founded by the curatorial committee Sarah Jury, Helen Kaplinsky and Lucy A. Sames, supported by Enclave.
#temporarycustodians is an R&D platform, initiated by curator Helen Kaplinsky and artist Maurice Carlin, asking how the shift towards the share economy and p2p might provide an alternative to historical modes of collecting art.
Alongside the exhibitions programme at Res, #temporarycustodians will be enacting the distribution of 'Performance Publishing: Regent Trading Estate' (2013) an artwork by Maurice Carlin. The artist and Helen Kaplinsky invite you to develop a legal and company structure for the artwork, which will be co-owned by temporary custodian shareholders. Company assets consist of a set of 135 unique print works plus a range of digital, live and object-based components. During spring we will hold a series of public sessions to formulate the share offer to be released in June. The sessions will include invited specialists in property, art law and business planning. Information about the public sessions and share offer will be released on beingres.orgsoon.
#temporarycustodians is supported by Arts Council England, Islington Mill Studios, University of Salford Collection and Castlefield Gallery New Art Spaces.
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