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|  Yoko Ono, 1967
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| Constellation in cyberspace: News > Works from the exhibition & artist's page >
1–23 MAY 2009
Constellation
CLAY PERRY’s photographs of London’s avant-garde art scene in the 1960s, shown together with works from the time
In the midst of 1960s ‘Swinging London’, Clay Perry was the
photographer for the avant-garde art scene, documenting a constellation
of the most innovative international artists of the period, including
Yoko Ono, David Medalla, Liliane Lijn, Robert Rauschenberg, Sérgio Camargo, Gustav Metzger, Jesús Rafael Soto, Takis and Mark Boyle.
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| Clay Perry became house photographer for the legendary Signals Gallery, initially known as The
Centre for Advanced Creative Study. Signals founders were Paul Keeler
and the young Filipino artist, David Medalla, together with critic Guy
Brett, and artists Marcello Salvadori and Gustav Metzger. Perry
photographed many of the artists in orbit around Signals and produced
images for the gallery’s iconic publication, the Signals Newsbulletin,
which brought together artists, writers and poets and provided a forum
for experimental art of the time.
After
exhibitions of sculpture and kinetic art at Keeler’s apartment in
Cornwall Gardens, Signals moved to Wigmore Street, launching with an
exhibition of ‘magnetic sculptures’ by the Greek artist Takis. Other
exhibitions focussed on Brazilian artists such as Lygia Clark, Mira
Schendel and Camargo who had come to Europe to escape the then
repressive military regime in Brazil. As Guy Brett pointed out
recently, ‘Signals was cosmopolitan, experimental and
interdisciplinary’, and was from 1964 to 1966 ‘a major showroom of the
international avant-garde’.
Perry
recalls that ‘some of the most memorable works at Signals were David
Medalla’s kinetic constructions installed on the balcony at Cornwall
Gardens: particularly his now famous ‘bubble mobiles’. These vertical
white boxes contained a small electric motor in a tub charged with
bubble bath which created extraordinary bubble sculptures, the Cloud Canyons.
Constellation also includes Perry’s previously unpublished photographs of Yoko Ono’s 1967 exhibition Half-a-Wind
at the Lisson Gallery. John Lennon backed her exhibition and also
discreetly participated with a series of empty glass bottles that were
shown on a high shelf labelled ‘J. L.’. Ono’s main installation, titled Half-a-Room,
was a simulated apartment in which everything had been painted white
and then cut in half: half a painting, half a cabinet, half a chair,
half a teapot, and so on – half-objects suggesting the ability of
memory to complete the physical presence of the whole object. David
Medalla recalls that Ono ‘went around Portobello Road with a group of
people and collected lots of furniture and cut each piece in half – I
remember she had half a cake, I always wondered what happened to the
other half – I think it was her best show.’ Ono herself has said that
‘it was so innately connected with my private life... I realized that
there was a half empty space in my life. I'm presenting that to John.
John's filling the other half. That happened not only in the art
dialogue, but it happened in my life. Isn't that amazing?’
Clay
Perry studied photography at Guilford School of Art, and first became
involved with Signals in the summer of 1964. He later established a
career as an editorial and advertising photographer for numerous
publications. Perry says now that ‘Looking back on it all, I can’t help
thinking how lucky we were. The whole ethos of the time was about
creativity. Signals was ‘dedicated to the adventure of the modern
spirit’ – this was very much part of the optimism of the time and
something it was wonderful to have been part of.’
Artist's page >
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