Charles Avery
Thomas Hirschhorn
Yayoi Kusama
Bo Christian Larsson
Mark Manders
Yoshitomo Nara
Jason Rhoades
Pipilotti Rist
Chiharu Shiota
Keith Tyson
Stephanie Rosenthal
The exhibition explores the inner working of the artist's imagination through dramatic, large-scale installation art. Ten international artists transform the indoor galleries and outdoor sculpture terraces into a series of gigantic sculptural environments, each of which represents an individual mindscape. Works by: Charles Avery, Thomas Hirschhorn, Yayoi Kusama, Bo Christian Larsson, Mark Manders, Yoshitomo Nara, Jason Rhoades, Pipilotti Rist, Chiharu Shiota and Keith Tyson.
The Hayward Gallery’s 2009 summer exhibition continues the recent tradition of inviting high profile
and up-and-coming artists from around the world to transform the Gallery’s unique outdoor and
indoor exhibition spaces. This year, ten artists have been selected to show works that explore
how the inner workings of the mind - emotions, thoughts, memories and dreams – can be
represented in three-dimensional space, shedding light on their creativity and inviting visitors to
explore their own thought processes.
The exhibition features new and existing works by the following artists: Charles Avery (UK), Thomas
Hirschhorn (Switzerland), Yayoi Kusama (Japan), Bo Christian Larsson (Sweden), Mark Manders
(The Netherlands), Yoshitomo Nara (Japan), Jason Rhoades (USA), Pipilotti Rist (Switzerland),
Chiharu Shiota (Japan) and Keith Tyson (UK).
Over the last few summers, with major successes such as Antony Gormley: Blind Light (2007) and
Psycho Buildings: Artists Take On Architecture (2008), the Hayward Gallery has established itself as a
leading venue for curated experiential exhibitions, tailored to the Gallery’s unique spaces. Highlights of
this year’s show include three works by iconic Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama, rarely exhibited in the UK,
as she transforms the Gallery into a vision of her signature polka dots. Visitors are able to immerse
themselves in Dots Obsession (2009), a large mirrored corridor filled with red spotty balloons, and walk
through a dot-covered landscape on one of the outside sculpture terraces. Twenty-five trees along
Queen’s Walk are also covered in red and white polka dots for the duration of the exhibition.
Five of the ten artists in the exhibition have created new works, each presenting a different way in which
artists construct images and installations that explore the mind. Turner-prize winner Keith Tyson is
showing a new series of Studio Wall Drawings, including a gigantic composite image of a brain, while
Charles Avery is presenting new drawings and sculptures as part of his ongoing The Islanders project.
Two new sculptures by Dutch artist Mark Manders, who is exhibiting for the first time in a major London
show, are on display. The exhibition also introduces visitors to new works by Chiharu Shiota and Bo
Christian Larsson, two promising artists who have not been seen in a major UK exhibition before.
Stephanie Rosenthal, Chief Curator of the Hayward Gallery, said:
‘Many artworks encourage the viewer to see the world through the artist’s eyes. The works in Walking in
My Mind do more than this, as they pull the viewer into the unique worlds of ten major international
artists who are explicitly preoccupied with their own minds and the creative process. The installations
function as metaphors for the creative mind, inviting visitors to walk in and around the artists’ inner worlds
translated into physical works of art.’
Since 2004, Charles Avery’s (b. 1973) work has focused on a single, epic project, The Islanders, an
encyclopaedic investigation of an imaginary island and everything it contains, documented in text, paint
and sculpture. For Walking in My Mind, Avery presents his tardis-like Eternity Chamber on one of the
Gallery’s external sculpture terraces, as well as new drawings and sculptures of island creatures, inviting
visitors to lose themselves in the artist’s imagination.
Swiss artist Thomas Hirschhorn (b. 1957) has said of his art that he wants the visitor ‘to be inside a 24-
hour brain in action’. He is represented by Cavemanman (2002), a sprawling complex of caves and
linking tunnels made from cardboard and glossy brown parcel-tape. In each of the four caves, the visitor
encounters an eclectic array of information, objects and images – from clocks showing the same time in
different cities and foil-covered shop dummies, to gigantic books tied to sticks of dynamite and
photocopied excerpts from philosophical writings.
Iconic Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama’s (b.1929) work is characterised by compulsive iterations of certain
motifs, such as polka dots and infinite nets, which the artist says are the result of hallucinations that she
has experienced since childhood. Her installation Dots Obsession (2009), part of a series, immerses
visitors in a large mirrored corridor filled with red spotty balloons, leading on to one of the outside
sculpture courts, which is transformed with bright green Astroturf under foot and big red spotty skittle-
shaped sculptures.
Visitors come face-to-face with the subconscious of Swedish artist Bo Christian Larsson (b. 1976) in a
new sculptural environment taking up the entire staircase connecting the Hayward Gallery’s upper and
lower galleries. Based in Germany and a rising figure on the continental art scene, this is the first
opportunity visitors have to experience Larsson’s performance installation art in England. The starting-
point for The first cut is the deepest and the division of seven is a performance during the preparation
period of the exhibition, involving the artist and actors performing a cast of characters representing
Larsson’s different persona, which form the basis of an eerie installation bedecked with trees and owls.
In 1986, at the age of 18, Dutch artist Mark Manders (b. 1968) embarked on his ongoing project Self-
portrait as a Building, which he describes as ‘a place where my thoughts are frozen together’. Exhibiting
for the first time in a major London show, he is represented by six works from his project, including two
new sculptures, each a fragment of the artist’s fictional self.
Celebrated Japanese Pop artist Yoshitomo Nara (b. 1959) collaborates with creative design team graf
to create wooden hut-like installations, one of which is on display. Intended as a recreation of the artist’s
studio and representing a little hut atop a hill that Nara recalls from his childhood, these large uncanny
structures incorporate Nara’s iconic and intriguing drawings of balloon-headed children, as well as
various artist objects.
During his all too brief career, Jason Rhoades (1965 - 2006) achieved international notoriety for his
immense, sprawling installations. He is represented by The Creation Myth (1998), an enormous
assemblage of interconnected machines and everyday products, which ‘is about how one creates and
how one sees the act of creation’, according to the artist’s thinking.
Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist (b. 1962) is best known for her lush multimedia installations that playfully and
provocatively merge fantasy and reality. This is the first opportunity for a UK audience to see Extremities
(smooth, smooth) (1999), a film installation reconfigured for the Hayward exhibition, in which images of
body parts – a gigantic foot, hand, breast, mouth and ear – float and dance in space, immersing the
viewer’s own body with that of the artist’s work.
Chiharu Shiota (b.1972), a Japanese artist who has made Berlin her base since 1996, is known to
enmesh mysterious and frightening objects – as various as dresses, burnt-out pianos, charred chairs and
hospital beds – into intricate cocoons of black wool. Relating to dreams and childhood traumas, the
threads serve to connect the artist’s memories and emotions, creating mindscapes that are full of
physical and psychological tension, at once comforting and threatening. Shiota has taken part in many
international group exhibitions, recently at the National Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo and the
Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma in Helsinki, and this is her first showing in the UK.
Turner-prize winner Keith Tyson’s (b. 1969) interest in the creative process is demonstrated by his
Studio Wall Drawings, an ongoing series of complex works on paper which record the artist’s thought
process and working practice. Occupying three walls, Tyson’s new series of drawings includes a gigantic
composite image of a brain, set within a landscape. The installation also features a sculpture
representing the artist as a young boy and is accompanied by sound pieces explaining each work as it is
made.
Walking in My Mind is curated by Stephanie Rosenthal, Chief Curator of the Hayward Gallery, and
Mami Kataoka, International Associate Curator. It opens at the Hayward Gallery on 23 June – 6
September 2009.
Information and tickets: 0871 663 2519
Catalogue
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue produced by Hayward Publishing, featuring
essays by Stephanie Rosenthal, Mami Kataoka, Brian Dillon and Dr. Susan Blackmore. Exhibition price:
£19.99. ISBN: 978-1-85332-277-8. The catalogue features photography of all the installations in the
exhibition.
Public Programme
To accompany the exhibition, the Hayward Gallery has programmed a series of events and lectures that
complement and further explore the theme of the exhibition:
Sunday 21 June, 4pm
St Paul’s Roof Pavilion
WALKING IN MY MIND: THE PRELUDE
Curators Mami Kataoka and Stephanie Rosenthal discuss themes and works featured in the exhibition
with several of the participating artists.
£5
Friday 17 July, 7pm
Purcell Room
THOMAS HIRSCHHORN
Artist Thomas Hirschhorn discusses his work in relation to the exhibition
£8
For further Press information please contact:
Helena Zedig, Visual Arts Press Manager, on 020 7921 0887 or Helena.Zedig@southbankcentre.co.uk
or Gillian Fox, Visual Arts Press Officer, on 020 7921 0631 or Gillian.Fox@southbankcentre.co.uk
The Hayward
Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road - London
The Hayward Gallery will close at 6pm on Friday 3 July 2009 due to a private event.
Opening hours for the Hayward Gallery:
Open daily 10am-6pm
Fridays 10am-10pm
The Hayward Gallery will close at 6pm on Friday 3 July 2009 due to a private event.
Tickets
Advance tickets are available at southbankcentre.co.uk, by calling 0871 663 2519, or in person at the
Hayward Gallery ticket office.
Full Price £9,
Seniors 60+ £8,
Concessions £6,
Students/16-18 yrs £4.50,
Under 16 £4.50,
Under 12 (out of school hours) Free,
Southbank Centre Members: Free