Exhibition

Sam Keogh - Sated Soldier, Sated Peasant, Sated Scribe

17 Sep 2021 – 12 Dec 2021

Regular hours

Monday
Closed
Tuesday
Closed
Wednesday
12:00 – 18:00
Thursday
12:00 – 18:00
Friday
12:00 – 18:00
Saturday
12:00 – 18:00
Sunday
12:00 – 18:00

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Travel Information

  • 21 - 47 - 53 - 136 - 171 - 172 - 177 - 188 - 321 - 436 - 453
  • New Cross Gate Overground Station - New Cross Overground Stations
  • New Cross Gate Station - New Cross Station
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Running across the basement galleries of the CCA, artist Sam Keogh presents a performance, and installation of ceramic sculptures and six large-scale collaged paintings on paper, that draw on pre-modern motifs and myths of abundance.

About

Keogh mines this image for its utopian radicalism at a time of strict feudal power relations and peasant revolt. The fantasy of rest, pleasure and perpetual feasts depicted here might be read as an important contribution to a proto-communist imaginary. But Cockaigne is also a place where everything is cooked, and so closer to being dead than alive. The main figures are bloated, heavy and immobilised by their gluttony in this world of beige and brown where nothing seems to be growing, but instead slouches toward decomposition as time has slowed or stopped. In this sense, Bruegel’s The Land of Cockaigne can be read as a moralising warning to the ‘work-shy’, that they would end up in a pleasurable but stodgy purgatory rather than Heaven. Keogh see’s these contradictory elements of the myth as being part of its persistence as fantasy. Its qualities of nonsense and impossibility don’t amount to a workable image of a potential future world, but instead appeal to the libidinal or bodily desires of the audience – things which don’t need to be understood to function.

The exhibition will also include large collages from cut out painting and drawing on paper. Keogh made these works as ‘cartoons’; 1:1 scale blueprints used by tapestry weavers to reproduce a design in silk. Cartoons were often worked into, cut up and glued back together numerous times before the artist was satisfied with the composition. The ‘Lady and the Unicorn’ tapestries made in the 15th century Flanders are an important point of departure for Keogh’s collages. The original meaning of the tapestries’ complex system of allegorical symbols is lost, but they are thought to depict the five senses, plus a sixth. The main figures of the tapestries are surround by the millefleur (‘thousand flowers’) motif made up of multiple plants in simultaneous fruit and bloom – time and space again collapsed into an image of abundance.

Together, the physical elements of the exhibition form a phantasmagorical garden of abundance and suspended time, blossoming with images of worried cartoon clocks; sloths; inhalers; videogame avatars; duvets; unicorns and roast chickens that fly into your open mouth. The sculptures and collage will serve as backdrop and props in a performance which pull these ideas through each other in a tangled monologue, extending Keogh’s use of objects, images and speech to create environments that coagulate memory, narrative, and history.

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