Exhibition
Living Memory: Louise Bourgeois, Nicolas Godin & Gideon Rubin
29 Sep 2023 – 27 Oct 2023
Regular hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Wednesday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Thursday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Friday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Saturday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Sunday
- 10:00 – 18:00
Free admission
All Saint's Chapel
Address
- 82-83 Margaret Street
- Fitzrovia
- London
England - W1W 8LH
- United Kingdom
This group show brings together sculpture by Louise Bourgeois with a new series of paintings by Gideon Rubin, and a site-specific sound piece by Nicolas Godin (of Air).
About
The All Saints Chapel was the first purpose-built place of worship for the Society of All Saints Sisters of the Poor; rich in cultural and historic interest the chapel houses a wall painting from 1861 of the Crucifixion with attendant female saints by John Richard Clayton. The fresco, along with the convent’s purposeful history, which accommodated a women’s order, whilst serving as a space for women, provides a poignant context in which to house the work of Bourgeois and Rubin. Though working across different periods and from different perspectives both artists have, or had, a career-long exploration of the human form, particularly women’s bodies, exploring the important role that memory and time plays not only in the creation of art, but also in how we understand ourselves, the world and our surroundings
Louise Bourgeois sublimated her emotions and childhood traumas into her practice, whilst Gideon Rubin’s haunting faceless characters in muted tones, which are sourced from other peoples faded photographs, old magazines or film stills, imply a sense of loss and melancholy, of remote memories. The erasure of facial features could be seen as a violent act and Rubin has periodically addressed the painful reality of the erasure of cultural and social identities throughout our own recent history. However in each artists practice turmoil is enveloped in the creative act of making. Both acknowledge the power of art as social prescription, as a means to mitigate past wounds; to understand, acknowledge and amend.
The exhibition will include a new series of paintings by Rubin based on stills from 'Mädchen in Uniform', the 1931 film by Christa Winsloe, alongside three significant sculptures by Bourgeois from the late 1940’s to the 2000’s. Many of Bourgeois' breakthrough works were from the 1940’s, including those made from scavenged and carved wood that are then cast in bronze, such as Woman with a Secret, which like Brother and Sister from 1949 represent the artist’s interest in the human form and relationships but also in traditional techniques. A third work, Arch of Hysteria from 2000, explores the body in sewn fabric and refers to the work of French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot, best known for his pioneering work on ‘hysteria’.
Music acts as a conduit between the psychological and visceral and a brand new audio work by French musician, Nicolas Godin becomes an integral element of the immersive exhibition. In response to the artists practices and to the architecture of the chapel - which historically would have been animated by sound - the soundscape is conceived to create a space that is both physical and reflective.
The exhibition, hosted by Unity Real Estate, is generously supported by Galerie Karsten Greve.