You Promised Me Poems. Through performance, meetings, video and organised group and individual encounters, Clements investigates the role of the audience within contemporary art, often focusing on minor gestures or oddities that reveal subtle or complex power structures.
Curated by Chris Bayley
VITRINE Bermondsey Square is delighted to present ‘You Promised Me Poems’, the first solo exhibition of
London based artist Leah Clements.
Clements’ practice is formed through the construction of social situations and looks at the oddities of normality
and human relationships, recently focusing on empathy and the role of the audience. Through performance,
meetings, video and organised group and individual encounters, Clements investigates the role of the audience
within contemporary art, often focusing on minor gestures or oddities that reveal subtle or complex power
structures.
Using VITRINE Bermondsey Square’s unconventional 16 metre gallery, Clements transforms the space into an
intimate setting that shifts between an activated and deactivated state; exploring ideas of intimacy as both an
aesthetic and a notional concern.
The work is not immediately recognisable but physical enough to form a moment of wonder. The space largely
rests empty, particularly so if visited in its deactivated state, though the disembodied results of a performance
on the evening of the private view plays throughout as an audio work, interested in the remnants that are left by
transferences from one body to another, or from body to object; it will continue to speak of the physicality of pain
caused by a close relationship long after the sources are gone
Similar concerns of transference are explored in a current work held at Open School East; ‘The Empath Project’,
which looks at the personality type ‘Empath’: someone who is highly empathetic, sometimes to the point of their
detriment. The project begins with an online personality test that facilitates discussion around what this diagnosis
may mean whilst questioning individual and group identity around it.
In a performance taking place across Bermondsey Square and Bermondsey Square Hotel on Sunday 22nd August,
Clements explores forms of intimacy where the audience’s experience of the piece is determined by the results of a
personality test.
In conjunction with the exhibition, a publication of the same name has been formed, focussing on Clements’
research, it acts as a tangible element to the ephemeral nature of the exhibition that further explores and sustains
these ideas.
Leah Clements (b.1989, UK) lives and works in London. She graduated from Goldsmiths College in 2013 with a
BA (hons) in Fine Art. Exhibitions and events include: Empath Project, ongoing, Open School East, London (2015),
Enclosures, Canal, London, The Day Job, Hoxton Basement, London (2014) Show, But Also Tell, King’s College
Anatomy Museum, London (2014) Thirteen Video Art Festival, Stockholm (2013) LUPA 18, LUPA, London (2013)
Innit, 68m2 Copenhagen (2013) Co.lab.5, SUMMIT Gallery, London (2012) Dark Therapy, Goldsmiths College,
London (2012) and Freshly Scratched, Battersea Arts Centre, London (2011).
Chris Bayley (b.1991, UK) is a Curator and Writer based in London. He graduated in 2012 with a BA in Illustra-
tion and in 2014 graduated with an MA in Museum and Gallery Studies, Curatorial Pathway. Much of his research
focuses on discursivity, art discourse and the educational turn, with a particular focus on supplementary formats as a
tool for thinking about exhibition making such as the catalogue, the interview and the event as demonstrated within
‘The Day Job’, Hoxton Basement (2014); an exhibition of Gallery Assistants employed at Serpentine Galleries,
London. Recent curated shows include: Rebecca Molloy, Till Death do us Party, VITRINE Bermondsey Square (2015)
and An evanescent fix (co-curated with Alys Williams), VITRINE (2015).
Image: Leah Clements, Research Image, 2015
Press contact: exhibitions@vitrinegallery.co.uk
Opening: Friday 7 August 2015 (6-9pm) Performance (8pm)
VITRINE
183-185 Bermondsey Street, London Bridge
Wed - Sat 12pm to 7pm, Sat 12pm to 6pm