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20 February - 3 May 2004
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Admission £4, concessions £3
Mike Kelley, Los Angeles-based sculptor, performance
and installation artist, is one of the most significant artists
working today. Hard to categorise, Kelley has dissected the moral
and cultural conventions and practices of contemporary society with
deadpan humour in performances, installations, architectural models,
paintings, drawings and music. The Uncanny is the first
large-scale solo show devoted to the artist in the UK since his
survey exhibition at the ICA, London in 1992. The exhibition is
based on a project originally curated by Kelley more than a decade
ago, which has been revised and updated for Tate Liverpool in close
collaboration with the artist.
Sigmund Freud described the uncanny as ‘a hidden,
familiar thing that has undergone repression and then emerged from
it’. In The Uncanny, Kelley explores memory, recollection,
horror and anxiety through the juxtaposition of a highly personal
collection of objects with realist figurative sculpture.
The central element of the exhibition consists of
a substantial number of polychrome figurative sculptures that embody
the feeling of the uncanny through their scale and use of colour,
form and material. Kelley relates these to the idea of the ‘double’
– the disturbingly realistic representation of the human figure
suspended between life and death. Non-art objects include a variety
of historical and contemporary anatomical models, wax figures, animatronic
puppets and mounted (stuffed) animals. This section is complemented
by a large collection of black and white documentary photographs
depicting figurative sculpture, including wax figures, Dada and
Surrealist mannequins, film stills, newspaper clippings and cartoons,
whose imagery and subject matter evoke the sense of the uncanny.
These works are complemented by the Harems: sixteen
groups of object types accumulated by the artist throughout his
lifetime, bringing together autobiographical elements with an investigation
into the urge to collect and categorise, as a means of understanding
but also controlling the world.
The exhibition at Tate Liverpool is an opportunity
not only for the artist to recreate The Uncanny, but to
update it, so that the exhibition itself becomes a work in progress.
The sections that follow contain extracts from texts
written by Mike Kelley, which elaborate on some of the themes and
concerns in the selection of artwork for The Uncanny. The
texts in full are in the catalogue that accompanies the exhibition.
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