Rome. Working across a variety of media, the exhibition centres on a new video, which weaves strands from documentaries about ancient Rome, Mussolini and the making of the movie Ben Hur, considered the greatest achievement of Hollywood epic cinema.
Rome
For his second show at Sadie Coles HQ, Jonathan Horowitz takes the eternal city as
his subject. Rome, as the keystone of western civilisation, becomes for Horowitz an
all encompassing imaginary construct; the embodiment of the ideal society, the
epitome of decadent society. By extension he considers its status as the model for
totalitarian and democratic governments, from Napoleon to the US founding fathers,
from Mussolini to Hitler.
Working across a variety of media, the exhibition centres on a new video, which
weaves strands from documentaries about ancient Rome, Mussolini and the making of
the movie Ben Hur, considered the greatest achievement of Hollywood epic cinema. The
gallery will also house a Modernist monumental arch. Through this (re)construction
Horowitz brings into focus the highly politicised role of Rome’s architecture; from
the epic grandeur of its classical foundations through to Mussolini’s reprisal of
this legacy of monument building, creating a whole fascist / modernist mini city,
EUR, with its own Colosseum, St Peter’s and so on, which sought to re-imagine and
reincarnate ancient Rome.
Horowitz highlights the pivotal role of architecture in government’s aspirations to
stamp values on the cityscape and through the ‘changeable commemoration’ feature of
his arch, he highlights the way in which architecture is created or retrospectively
reconfigured to express political ideals. This anti-fascist monument / advertising
hoarding hybrid, constructed from recycled plastic, throws into relief the
opportunistic hijacking of visual signs to political sloganeering ends, manifested
not least in the uneasy balance between the ‘Fascist style’ and modernism.
Taking the iconic forms of antiquity - pillar, arch, idealized human form - and
focussing on the overwhelming spectacle that defines the ‘Fascist style’, Horowitz
questions its proximity to more generic trends in popular culture. Horowitz’s
democratic use of readily available materials is in keeping with the everyman
political spirit that lies behind the work. Here, as elsewhere Horowitz takes
received values and images, prodding them, deflating them, and in so doing forcing
us to reassess them.
Jonathan Horowitz was born in New York and continues to live and work in New York
state. Horowitz has been included in numerous key exhibitions of recent years
including, The Eighth Square: Gender, Life, and Desire in the Visual Arts Since
1960, Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany, 2006; Into Me / Out of Me, P.S.1 Contemporary
Art Center, Long Island City, NY, 2006; Down by Law, Whitney Museum of American Art,
New York; Realit;-)t. 30 Video Works from the Goetz Collection in Munich. From Olaf
Breuning to Sam Taylor-Wood, Seedamm Kulturzentrum, Pfaffikon, Switzerland, 2005;
Superstars: From Warhol to Madonna, Kunsthalle Wien and Kunstforum Wien, Vienna,
Austria, 2005; 100 Artists See God, ICA, London, 2004; Genealogies of Glamour: The
Future has a Silver Lining, Migros Museum, fur Gegenwartskunst, Zurich, Switzerland,
2004
Private view, 07 Sept, 6-8pm
Sadie Coles HQ
35 Heddon Street - London