Stuart Brisley has been at the forefront of
experimentation and political debate within the visual arts –
performance artist, painter, writer, professor at the Slade School of
Art. He has been an enduring influence on many of the present
generation of young British artists and his radical practice has made
an important contribution to the British art scene, playing a
fundamental part in the development of installation and performance
art. As Richard Gott has pointed out: ‘Homage to Brisley’s performances
and installations and references to his work, can be found in many
unexpected places and in the work of other artists.’
Brisley first achieved notoriety in the 1960s and ’70s
and is perhaps best-known for his disturbing physical performances, but
his work as an artist extends over four decades and has also embraced
painting, print, sculpture and installation, films and fictions, and
large-scale participatory projects. At the centre of this diverse work
lies his exploration of the essential qualities of what it means to be
human – he has challenged the human body in physical, psychological and
emotional ways.
In his performance work, Brisley engages the
audience and establishes a dialogue of action and reaction that induces
a release from conventions of social behaviour. He has also examined
the body politic and images of power; his paintings, prints and
sculpture have expressed a literary and symbolic approach to power as
represented in the media.
This retrospective view of Brisley’s
work focuses primarily on his paintings. It includes the collaged and
constructed paintings produced in London and Munich in the late 1950s
and early ’60s, works that
explored the notion of a painting as an object connected to both body
and ground, as well as Brisley’s fascination with the qualities of
matter and the use of debris such as fragments of corrugated iron
decayed by rust. His recent paintings continue this interest in the
accumulation of the discarded, stemming from his long study of the
human body and engagement with material as subject.
The
exhibition incorporates films, sculpture, photographic works and
painting. A selection of Brisley's films, and films of his performances in Europe and
Britain, will form a significant part of the exhibition. The artist has made
this the occasion for the first screenings of The Leg and Sweating the Hole. Other screenings include Ten Days (video by Ken McMullen) and Arbeit Macht Frei.
A series of period photo sequence works relate to his performance works
from the late 1960s to the present focusing on his links with Europe.
England & Co, 2006
An illustrated catalogue is available. For more works from the exhibition: Artist's page > |