Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials. The largest exhibition to date of Turner Prize winning artist taking his title from a letter by Guillaume Apollinaire. It brings together new and older pieces in each of the media in which the artist has worked.
curated by Elena Filipovic
Mark Leckey is undoubtedly one of the most significant figures in a generation of artists that
emerged in the late 1990s, a recognition that was confirmed when he was awarded the
prestigious Turner Art Prize in 2008. Following a decade of near-abstinence from artmaking
and a protracted absence from the art world after his studies at the Newcastle Polytechnic from
1987 to 1990, Leckey returned to making work, and by 1999 had made an indelible impression
with his video Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore. This ode to British dance culture – from northern
soul to rave – is justly recognized as one of the most iconic works at the intersection of visual
art and pop culture, in the manner it excavates the relationship between disciplines. And with
it, the artist mapped the field of interests that would serve as the foundation for much of his
later work.
In recent years, Leckey’s avid exploration of the technological developments that shape the
world have made him an extraordinary chronicler of what defines our times: a society
transformed by the Internet and advancing technologies, in which the relations between people,
things, and the world around them are subject to permanent renegotiation. His works raise
questions about how to deal with the ever more dominant role of global brands, products, and
digital images, and the affective pull that these have on us. These themes are addressed in
Leckey’s work in a reflection on our present condition that is as astute and critical as it is
entertaining.
It was as an extension of his artistic practice, in which collecting, sampling and appropriating
digital images from the Internet are part and parcel of daily ‘research’, that in 2013 Mark
Leckey curated a traveling exhibition composed of the actual objects contained in his vast
collection of digital images. The exhibition was organised by Hayward Touring, London, and
entitled The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things. It assembled an incredible array of
archaeological artefacts, contemporary artworks and visionary machines on loan from
numerous institutions, estates and artists around the world. Included, for example, were a
medieval stone gargoyle, an Egyptian cat mummy, a mandrake root, a uterus-shaped vase and
a Cyberman helmet. These rubbed shoulders with works by Louise Bourgeois, Robert Gober,
Pierre Molinier, Allen Jones and Tøyen, to name a few.
The exhibition
Mark Leckey: Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials is the artist’s largest exhibition to
date. Taking his title from a letter by Guillaume Apollinaire, where he claims that he and the
filmmaker Georges Méliès ‘lend enchantment to vulgar materials’, Leckey identifies a similar
impulse at the heart of his own practice. That is precisely what the exhibition highlights by
bringing together new and older pieces in each of the media in which the artist has worked. The
exhibition features nearly all of the artist’s videos, including his video of dance hall youth
culture, Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore, and others that have been rarely shown, alongside key
sculptural works from the last decade, providing a long overdue survey of Leckey’s remarkable
oeuvre.
As a new production for his exhibition at WIELS, Leckey returns to the ideas behind that
exhibition in order to create an ambitious project that further turns to the process of what the
artist calls ‘aggregating’ (others might call it ‘curating’). Making a redux of The Universal
Addressability of Dumb Things exhibition, from various cardboard stand-ins, 3-D printed
copies and replicas of the original objects in that show, and including only a single ‘original’ –
the hand-shaped 13th Century silver reliquary – Leckey creates a new work entitled
UniAddDumThs that returns the ‘real’ borrowed artworks of his exhibition to their status as
digital avatars. If the reliquary piece stands alone as the only auratic thing in Leckey’s new
artwork-as-ersatz-exhibition, it is as much as an ur-representation of the ‘real’ (the relic as a
literal piece of the real) as a metaphor for the digital (literally, the digits of the hand): the real
and the digital laying at the very centre of Leckey’s work. As in his practice more broadly,
where he explores the tenuous boundaries between the simulacral, the virtual, the ersatz and
their real world referents, Leckey’s undertaking exemplifies a persistent interest in how
technology creates desires, memories and fantasies.
Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials is organised by WIELS in collaboration with Museo
d’Arte Contemporanea Donnaregina – Madre, Naples and Kunsthalle Basel. The exhibition will
be the subject of a MADRESCENZA – Seasonal School seminar in Naples in winter 2014-2015
and will travel in part to Kunsthalle Basel in 2015.
Catalogue
Accompanying the exhibition is Mark Leckey – On Pleasure
Bent, the first comprehensive monograph on the British artist’s
work. It traces in reverse chronology the connections between
the Leckey's recent production – including videos, sculptures,
installations, and lecture performances – and his earliest
works from the mid and late 1990s, revealing the persistent
centrality of popular culture, music, and technology to his
influential oeuvre. All the artist’s scripts to date appear
together for the first time in this lavishly illustrated volume,
which features newly commissioned essays by John Cussans,
Patrizia Dander, Elena Filipovic, and Alex Kitnick, as well as
an interview between the artist and Dan Fox. Designed by
Sara de Bondt, co-published by WIELS, Haus der Kunst, and Madre.
Editors : Patrizia Dander and Elena Filipovic
Graphic design : Sara de Bondt studio
Language : English
ISBN : 978-3-86335-618-7
Image: Circa ‘87, 2013. Offset print, 29 x 43 cm, framed: 46 x 61 cm. Courtesy the artist; Gavin Brown's enterprise, New York; Galerie
Press contact:
Micha Pycke T +32 (0)2 340 00 53 M +32 (0)486 680 070 micha.pycke@wiels.org
WIELS Contemporary Art Centre, Brussels
Press conference: September 24, 2014 at 11.00
Opening: September 25, 2014 at 19.00
Complementary programme
17.12.2014, 19:00, Look Who’s Talking: Elena Filipovic
Guided tour of the exhibition by the curator
WIELS Contemporary Art Centre
Avenue Van Volxem 354 - 1190 Brussels
Opening hours
Wednesday – Sunday: 11.00 – 18.00
Nocturne: 11.00 – 21.00 every 1st and 3rd Wednesdays of the month
Closed: Monday – Tuesday
Tickets
8€–0€
Free: every first Wednesday of the month
Every Sunday at 15.00, a guided visit in French or Dutch