Cornerhouse
Manchester
70 Oxford Street
+44 0161 2287621
WEB
The People You're Not
dal 28/1/2011 al 26/2/2011
Tue-Sat 12-20, Sun 12-18

Segnalato da

Clare Sydney



 
calendario eventi  :: 




28/1/2011

The People You're Not

Cornerhouse, Manchester

A satirical trip through the private and public faces of fame. The group show presents the projects of TV entertainer and popular satirical comedian Harry Hill, and infamous wooden-pants-wearing balladeer Norman Clayture.


comunicato stampa

Last year an acclaimed exhibition at Cornerhouse, 'Unrealised Potential', featured over 60 artists' proposals, all of which were - until now - unrealised. This year, three of those unfulfilled ideas have been selected for realisation, not by the artists themselves, but by members of the public, alongside cultural producer Bren O'Callaghan.

The resulting exhibition, 'The People You're Not', is a satirical trip through the private and public faces of fame, and presents the projects of TV entertainer and popular satirical comedian Harry Hill, Manchester legend Edward Barton, and infamous wooden-pants-wearing balladeer Norman Clayture. The People You're Not opens on 29 January and runs until 27 February 2011.

Harry Hill's proposal, 'To recreate George Cruikshank's The Worship of Bacchus Using Known Alcoholics' has been realised by Bren O'Callaghan. Victorian satire meets Heat Magazine as six illustrators put a contemporary spin on scenes from George Cruikshank's famous 1860 painting exposing the evils and horrors of alcohol. 'Performers' such as Kerry Katona, Elizabeth Taylor and Liza Minnelli, Courtney Love and George Best, Oliver Reed and Lindsay Lohan are given centre stage in six large-scale Victorian-style toy theatres, setting the scene for cautionary tales of drunken celebrity clichés and the pitfalls of the demon drink.

'Feel Free to Stroke', proposed by Norman Clayture, has been realised as an absurd, affectionate installation, that pays homage to the adoring fans and rock and roll life of 'Norman Clayture', a guitar hero in wooden underpants. Viewers are invited to step into Norman's office and get an insight into the public and private life of the notorious balladeer. With exclusive access to soul-baring letters from his adoring fans and a chance to step up on stage and experience five minutes of his fame.

Edward Barton's proposal was simply 'Please Improve My Work'. And so the group who chose it have recreated a significant, startling work of his entitled 'I've Got No Chicken But Five Wooden Chairs'. In the new, improved version, 'I've Got a Chicken But No Wooden Chairs', an audio-visual installation merges vintage footage with new, bringing a darkly absurd element to the original. The work blurs the line between public performance and intimate private life, inviting a closer, off-kilter look at the eccentric side of the celebrity soul.

The exhibition is linked by a conceptual thread: all of the artists selected use alter egos and performative personas to reflect and react to the humdrum of popular culture, celebrity, fame and the absurd - Owen Barton has become Edward Barton, Len Horsey is Norman Clayture and Harry Hill is otherwise known as Matthew Hall. The current cultural climate often suggests that it is now a basic human right for everyone to become 'celebrities', though here the group's interpretations highlight the darker reality of this seemingly alluring entitlement.

Opening Friday 28 January, 19:30

Cornerhouse
70 Oxford Street - Manchester
Hours: Mon: Closed, Tues-Sat: 12-20, Sun 12-18
Admission free

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dal 21/11/2014 al 14/3/2015

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