An exhibition of new work by Sam Taylor-Wood, that will include a number of silent films, a series of new single-subject photographs and new sculptural works, that together expose the vulnerability and resilience of the human body and psyche when tested to its limit. The film Mute, from which the title of the show is drawn, presents a young man singing a passage from an opera with the sound removed, denying immediate gratification.
Sam Taylor-Wood
White Cube is pleased to present Mute, an exhibition of new work by British artist Sam
Taylor-Wood.
The exhibition will include a number of silent films, a series of new single-subject
photographs and new sculptural works, that together expose the vulnerability and resilience of the
human body and psyche when tested to its limit.
The exhibition is a barometer measuring the
intensity of the psychological and emotional field each work describes.
The film Mute, from which the title of the show is drawn, presents a young man singing a passage
from an opera with the sound removed, denying immediate gratification. Yet, it is through our
inability to hear the imagined beauty of the voice that seems to pass through and animate the singer
- precisely, through its failure to reach us - that the film's extraordinary pathos is discharged.
Still
Life is a film work that shows a sensual bowl of fruit at its most full, lush and ripe caught in a
moment of Cézanne-like perfection. Slowly the fruit rots and folds in on itself, disintegrating into a
green unctuous mass. The perfect form becomes unformed and corrupted; a kind of Vanitas painting
across time.
In Pieta the artist is seen carrying the actor, Robert Downey, Jr. in her arms, recalling
Michelangelo's religious pietà in the Vatican in Rome. Pieta presents relations of dependency,
nurture and support, distilling a sense of peace and calm that is in sharp contrast with the alienation
of Breach.
Breach is a single-take silent film shot in real time, where a girl sitting on the floor
becomes increasingly anxious and distressed by some unseen yet threatening presence. It is not
clear whether there is a real traumatic 'other' outside of the shot who is generating the fear or
whether it is something in her own mind. Breach also recalls Andy Warhol's film 'Beauty #2' in which
Edie Sedgwick's jealous ex-lover, becoming increasingly upset and agitated, shouts at her. In
proximity to Breach is Taylor-Wood's beautiful large-scale sculpture of a unicorn, caught in a
struggle to defy its own concrete material and lift itself up and out of the ground.
Taylor-Wood's new single-subject photographs will punctuate the space like details distilled from
religious paintings; even the most quotidian image of a cow in a field, appears somehow displaced
from its witnessing presence in a Renaissance painting of the Nativity.
Bound Ram slips in and out
of being a symbol of Christ's passion, Self Portrait as a Tree shows a fragile and impossibly angled
tree shot in the golden glow of twilight, and another work, The Leap, presents an image of a young
man suspended in mid-air, as if bestowing benediction, against a backdrop of leafy tree-tops.
All of Taylor-Wood's works are full of narrative possibilities yet resist any specific symbolic meaning.
These works continue to explore the relationship between the sacred and profane, fusing religious
imagery informed by Renaissance and Baroque painting with the secular, urban and contemporary
landscape that the artist herself inhabits.
Sam Taylor-Wood has had numerous solo and group exhibitions both in Europe and the United
States including the Prada Foundation, Milan, Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC, Centre
Nationale de la Photographie, Paris and Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid. In
2002 she will also be exhibiting at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.
For further information please contact Alexandra Bradley or Honey Luard
on 020 7930 5373.
23.11.01 - 12.01.02
Open Tuesday to Saturday 10am - 6pm
White Cube²,
48 Hoxton Square, London N1 6PB