This weekend I had to chance to stop by an exhibition in the
Bloomberg SPACE that I have been trying to get to for ages. The exhibition is
presented by British contemporary artist Matthew Darbyshire, but includes
social history and anthropology collections from the Tyne
and Wear Archive and Museum service. Months ago I helped gather the
anthropology collections to accommodate the artist’s main criteria – that he
had similar ethnographic objects made of wood with examples from all the
continents.
Unfortunately, that is a rather tight criterion for our
limited anthropology collections, but that didn’t mean the exhibition demand
didn’t take up a good part of my time for quite a while. I had blogged
previously about the need for correct loan valuations of these important
objects (here).
Part of the loan requirements demanded the individual objects being loaned had the
appropriate contextual labels so that even though they were being shown out of
their ethnographic context, the audience looking at the exhibition could still
understand something deeper than an artistic interpretation of the objects.
I expected to show up and see the familiar faces of our objects
interpreted in an artistic context ‘exploring a contemporary world of
collisions between objects, ephemera, styles and epochs’. I found the faux EU
standard housing interior I expected with the objects unsettlingly dispersed
throughout the exhibition, but with the added surprise of two ladies dressed up
in vinyl wood patterned suits doing performance art in the room.
I think they were mock acting out daily activities you would
do at home just in extreme slow motion. I really wasn’t sure though. I think
the value that performance art adds to installations such as the Darbyshire
installation is interesting, but in all honesty I really didn’t get it. It was
really funny though. There was a kid at the show who I believe agreed with me
and went out of his way to follow the wood girls around and try to interact
with them. It definitely made the room feel a lot more comfortable.
Kid trying to get wood girls' attention |
The show ends at the Bloomberg SPACE on June 29, but will be
coming up to The Shipley Gallery after that.
Wood girls taking a break |
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