Anna Johanna Blom
Adrian Di Duca
David McKeran
Hannah Plumb
Kes Richardson
Nawfal Salman
Yoshiko Sato
Zavier Ellis
A multi media exhibition that celebrates sex and explores art inspired by the sex industry. Consisting of painting, drawing, video, sculpture and mixed media, this exhibition offers an overview of erotic artwork by contemporary artists deriving from pornography, sex cards, sex toys and sexual identity.
Anna Johanna Blom > Adrian Di Duca > David McKeran > Hannah Plumb > Kes
Richardson > Nawfal Salman > Yoshiko Sato
Curated by Zavier Ellis
CLAPHAM ART GALLERY presents 'SEX sells', a multi media exhibition that
celebrates sex and explores art inspired by the sex industry.
Consisting of painting, drawing, video, sculpture and mixed media, this
exhibition offers an overview of erotic artwork by contemporary artists
deriving from pornography, sex cards, sex toys and sexual identity.
Currently there is an abundance of artists working internationally
within and around sexual parameters. This exhibition represents a
selection who are uninhibited and who reflect the ever-present nature of
sex and its industry within society. Visual culture is often loaded with
sexual imagery in many contexts. It is given that sex is used to sell
consumer goods; sex itself is sold; and sexual products are sold. We
have no volition in being exposed to this extraordinary phenomenon, be
it latent or overt, from a TV advertisement to front cover of a style
magazine to a sex card in a phone booth.
The artists here continue in a long history of modernist technique by
appropriating this imagery from low and mass culture such as
advertisements and pornography, and respond by making objects of great
formal beauty. These works contain an overtly sexual content whilst
maintaining an ambiguity that is absent within the original source
material. Not only this, but they do so in a celebratory fashion. A
subject which can even still be something of a taboo is aired here and
congratulated.
Anna Johanna Blom is a Swedish artist who graduated this year from the
Royal College of Art. Her video performance is concerned with female
sexual identity, the body, and female sexuality. Her work is erotic but
confrontational. By casting herself as subject Blom empowers herself and
projects emotional components of her sexuality onto us, examining
eroticism, desire, dependence, violence, release, control and the
personal as universal.
Adrian Di Duca makes large scale works of acrylic or inkjet prints on
canvas. They are coded, outsized re-presentations of images found on sex
cards or in pornographic magazines. Each piece consists of a large
number of tiny monochromatic canvases bound together, creating a
sculptural, flexible surface reminiscent of pixelated images or mosaics.
The image within is both shaped and disrupted by this pixilation,
creating a direct interplay between form and the formless.
David McKeran has been collecting prostitute's calling cards for a
number of years. Over this period he has identified a variety of styles
in which they are presented. These include those with an image
appropriated from a pornographic magazine; those which feature a genuine
photograph of the woman concerned taken either personally or
professionally in a studio; those which appear to the artist to have
been designed by a man; and those which he surmises have been produced
by the prostitute in question and represent her in a manner in which she
intends. It is these in which McKeran is particularly interested.
McKeran uses these cards as a point of departure from which to make
nervous, linear drawings, recalling cards that in a previous era
consisted of ink drawing illustrations. McKeran's technique is to fix
his gaze on the card whilst making the drawing with only cursory
glances. He replicates the figure as well as the writing, revealing
charged drawings 'that are resonant of our ambivalent attitudes in
society towards prostitution'.
Hannah Plumb graduated this year from Wimbledon School of Art. Her
sculptural, photographic and light box work is derived from a strong
interest in animism, which is 'the human ability to project life onto
inanimate and lifeless objects'. Plumb's work will consist of sculptures
cast from sex dolls, light boxes and badges featuring words and slogans
appropriated from the written descriptions on sex doll packaging such as
'loving mouth' or 'inviting mouth and anus'. Plumb subverts Classical
notions of art by appropriating its chief characteristics such as the
sculptural bust or reclining nude. Rendered as it is we are presented
with a debased, alternative version. She is concerned with fantasy,
taboo and the marketing that forms a connection between those and
marginalised reality.
Kes Richardson has achieved considerable commercial and critical success
as well as an abundance of substantial press coverage since he has been
showing with Clapham Art Gallery over the last two years. He is known
for his graphic renderings of portraits and nudes that he has
appropriated from internet pornography. By employing a strong sense of
design and an acute eye for colour Richardson creates immaculate,
hard-edged renderings. They are sensual works that achieve a subtlety
and ambiguity that is absent in the original source material.
Nawfal Salman is concerned with the notion of the snapshot. Working in
a photo-realist manner using pornographic magazines for subject matter
he creates small-scale, photographic print sized oil paintings. Salman
forms a direct interplay between painting, photography, pornography and
the art object. Rendered as paintings it could be argued that the
subject becomes even more objectified as the artist offers his subtle
reinterpretation. They are personalized, precious objects that intensify
the position of the subject as well as viewer.
Yoshiko Sato is a Japanese artist working in London. Sato's work is
notable for the fact that she always casts herself as subject.
Originally working in sculpture and performance, her recent work has
become more photographic in nature. Sato is concerned with female and
male sexuality, the self, objectification, fantasy and the sexual
commodity. Her work is confrontational and teasing, for example
previously selling her phone number or a rendezvous. For this show Sato
has turned as she has previously to the sex card. By forming her work
from an abundance of cards where she models and photographs herself Sato
asks 'for a new owner who'll look after her properly' or guarantees 'a
mind blowing blow job'. Her work is erotic and directly sexual as she
cannily emphasises the desires of the viewer, who is caught without
confirmation between fantasy and reality.
Image: Richardson 'Sinead-12' 86.5x86.5cm Acrylic on canvas. 2003
Exhibition Date:
Tuesday 18/11/03 - 20/12/03
tue-sat 12pm-8pm
Opening Preview (Serving Mixed Cocktails): Tuesday 18/11/03 7.00pm
- 9.00pm
Contact:
Zavier Ellis / Aniko Pall
clapham art gallery
61 venn street
london SW4 0BD
unit 02 40-48 bromell's road
london SW4 0BG
+44 (0)20 7720 0955