The title of this exhibition is borrowed from the German writer
WG Sebald's 1995 novel, an elegiac and fragmentary meditation
upon history, its lost customs and eccentric figures. Sebald's
anonymous narrator wanders the melancholy landscape of
East Anglia, discovering remnants of the past that prompt
meticulously researched digressions interspersed with enigmatic
photographs. Taking Sebald's tone and method as an inspiration,
the exhibition is similarly allusive and associative. The work of
Steven Claydon and Thomas Zipp explores the nature of history
and its lesser-known protagonists, and its critical moments of
transition, energy and change.
David Noonan's prints bring together fragments of the past
with the uncanny power of a half-remembered dream, while
David Wojnarowicz's photographs evoke a ruined, dissolute city
haunted by the archetypal figure of Arthur Rimbaud. Buried
traditions of European folk and fairy tales resurface in the work
of Nathalie Djurberg and Dorota Jurczak. Thomas Helbig takes
existing objects, such as kitsch figurines, and fashions them into
grotesque forms, bringing disturbing new associations to the
trace of the original object, while Saul Fletcher's photographs
provide a reflection upon solitude, personal identity and death.
Rings of Saturn is the first in a new series of
five thematic exhibitions located in Level 2 Gallery, Tate Modern's dedicated
space for the
latest ideas, themes and trends in international
contemporary art. The 2006-07 Level 2 series
is conceived and led by Emma Dexter, Curator,
Tate Modern. Assistant Curator for Rings
of Saturn, Cedar Lewisohn, Inspire Fellow,
Tate Modern.



