Exhibition
Ilana Harris-Babou: Clean Lines
22 May 2019 – 8 Sep 2019
Regular hours
- Wednesday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Thursday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Friday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Saturday
- 12:00 – 18:00
Address
- 80 Washington Square
- New York
New York - 10003
- United States
Ilana Harris-Babou investigates the aesthetics and politics of home design in her solo exhibition, Clean Lines.
About
This site-specific installation extends Harris-Babou’s previous video work, Red Sourcebook,which depicts the artist flipping silently through the pages of an outdoor design catalogue and marking them in red. The images are subtitled with quotes from the promotional brochure merged with sections from the 1936 Federal Housing Administration(FHA)Underwriting Manual. Through this collage, the artist produces a hybrid narrative, the source and goal of which are ambiguous and troubling.
For the Broadway Windows,Harris-Babou expands on the visual and textual tactics of Red Sourcebook and engage with its situation in downtown Manhattan. Comprised of videos, prints, and writings, the installation includes new and existing footage of home furniture design catalogues and a compilation of texts and maps from urban surveys and acts.
Here, the artist uses historical and official documents to draw an explicit link between the gesture of marking in red and the discriminatory practice of redlining, which started in 1934 with the founding of the FHA and the development of urban federal policies. Starting in the 1930’s, targeted neighbourhoods—typically those of low-income and racial minorities—were geographically demarcated on city maps, delineated in red, to prevent financial investment in the area. The insertion of these contour lines at once highlighted and diverted attention from these inner-city minority neighborhoods, ultimately accelerating their decay.
The result is a dark and haunting parody of luxury design culture and real estate development that foregrounds the exclusionary policies that continue to sustain these industries in the present.