CCA Centre for Contemporary Art
Andreas Siekmann
Petra Bauer
Pauline Boudry
Renate Lorenz
Matthijs de Bruijne
Andrea Francke
Nicholas Keogh
Annette Krauss and Read
Conal McStravick
Travis Meinolf
Christian Nyampeta
Mierle Laderman Ukeles
Helke Sander
Katerina Šeda
Haegue Yang
Aileen Burns
Johan Lundh
Binna Choi
Maiko Tanaka
Revolution Goes on - Derry. The project shares its ongoing research with presentations of newly produced and referential art works, an exhibition as a platform for a series of public activities and the growing project library.
ASK! (Actie Schone Kunsten) with Andreas Siekmann, Petra Bauer with Southall Black Sisters, Pauline Boudry & Renate Lorenz, Domestic Workers Netherlands with Matthijs de Bruijne, Andrea Francke, Household Belfast, GDR Library, Nicholas Keogh, Kleines Postfordistisches Drama, Annette Krauss and Read-in, Conal McStravick, Travis Meinolf, Christian Nyampeta, Our Autonomous Life?, Mierle Laderman Ukeles, Helke Sander, Kateřina Šedá, and Haegue Yang.
The Grand Domestic Revolution GOES ON at the Centre for Contemporary Art Derry~Londonderry (CCA), in its new phase and new venue, developing further upon its previous iterations at The Showroom, London and Casco, Utrecht.
The Grand Domestic Revolution (GDR) is an ongoing "living research" project initiated by Casco – Office for Art, Design and Theory, Utrecht, in October 2009. Inspired by US late nineteenth-century "material feminist" movements that experimented with communal solutions to isolated domestic life and work, GDR has involved artists, designers, domestic workers, architects, gardeners, activists and others to collaboratively investigate and re-articulate the domestic sphere, challenging traditional and contemporary divisions of private and public. The aim is to imagine new forms of living and working in common and put them into practice. GDR shares its ongoing research with presentations of newly produced and referential art works, an exhibition as a platform for a series of public activities and the growing project library. In particular, the touring programme of GDR is conceived as a special form of international collaboration, embedding it in the local context of each host venue and creating closer ties between the organisation and surrounding communities.
GDR at the CCA focuses on the contemporary working conditions of caregivers—primarily mothers and grandmothers—in the domestic sphere. In an investigative system of exchange, CCA will offer free childcare in an environment created by artist Andrea Francke and SureStart Edenballymore staff, and in return ask that the parents and care-givers making use of the service tell us about the conditions of domestic work in their lives. We will also look for inspiration in the historic housing conditions of Derry, together with the struggles for change and alternative experimentation undertaken. Research into local conditions, past and present, includes lectures by Laurence McKeown on the history of collectivisation in Irish prisons; Patricia Swann on her experience living in the Meitheal Community on Inch Island, Donegal; and Greg Claeys from Royal Holloway, University of London, on utopianism, communitarianism and the domestic. Artist Christian Nyampeta is being commissioned to produce the exhibition design at CCA, which will act as a framework for bringing together existing works by the aforementioned artists, the GDR Library, and new research. The design will include a reading room that will become a permanent feature of CCA, embedding the organisation's commitment to research and social space in the fabric of the venue.
Additional events comprise talks by curators Binna Choi and Maria Lind; a workshop with self-proclaimed action weaver Travis Meinolf; a graphic design workshop by Åbäke's Patrick Lacey; and a film and lecture hosted by scholar Marina Vishmidt. For more details, see the CCA website.
The Grand Domestic Revolution GOES ON at CCA has been supported by the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, and Arts Council of England through the UK City of Culture, and The Mondriaan Fund. The Grand Domestic Revolution has been developed with support of Stichting Doen, Mondriaan Fund, and Utrecht City Council.
If you did not manage to visit the previous exhibitions of GDR GOES ON, please read a review of the first GDR exhibition in Utrecht, published in Frieze by Nick Aikens here and Art Review's report by Laura Allsop on GDR GOES ON-London here.
For more information, or high-resolution images for GDR GOES ON-Derry, please contact Aislinn White at press@cca-derry-londonderry.org, or call +44 (0)28 7137 3538.
Opening: Saturday, 26 January, 6pm
Centre for Contemporary Art, Derry~Londonderry
10-12 Artillery Street Derry~Londonderry
Admission free