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Thomas Hirschhorn
26 Jun – 13 Sep 2015
Past exhibition

Creative destruction in the main galleries

Installation view of Thomas Hirschhorn's In-Between,2015. Courtesy Thomas Hirschhorn.

Artist Thomas Hirschhorn plays on our manic pleasure at seeing ruins by making a whole building collapse in on itself.” Adrian Searle, The Guardian

This is Hirschhorn’s version of a post-apocalyptic, post-capitalist world. But the space feels almost utopian: a beautifully staged ruin made from the rubble of a consumerist society.” Francesca Gavin, Artsy.net

 

For his first major solo show in London in many years, Thomas Hirschhorn presents a new work entitled In-Between at the South London Gallery. Based on and highlighting the quote; “Destruction is difficult. It is as difficult as creation.” by Italian Marxist theorist and politician, Antonio Gramsci, a new artwork made for the South London Gallery’s main space continues the artist’s exploration in recent works, of the aesthetic of ruins.

In his explanation of In-Between, he states: “The aesthetic of In-Between borrows from pictures of destruction-destruction by violence, by war, by accident, by nature, by structural failures, by corruption, by fatality. I want to establish a body of work which encompasses Antonio Gramsci’s quote. Without being anecdotic or literal, I can testify that to set-up a work in an exhibition space which gives form to destruction is indeed as difficult as anything else. With In-Between I want to create a new form, I want to propose an experience, an art-experience in the range of “successes, failures and in-betweens.”

Having emerged as an artist in the 1990s, Thomas Hirschhorn is internationally regarded as being one of the most important artists of his generation. Using low-grade materials – cardboard, plastic sheeting, packing tape, aluminium foil – variously combined with newspaper and magazine cuttings, mannequins, furniture and a wide range of other miscellany, together with references to radical theorists such as Gilles Deleuze and George Bataille, he has established an expansive but distinctive visual language with which he creates extraordinary, provocative artworks imbued with political content. Over the past twenty years, Hirschhorn has exhibited in museums and galleries worldwide, and equally importantly in more openly public locations, from city streets to housing estates. For example, his Gramsci Monument, a major public artwork installed during summer 2013 with the help of residents at Forest Houses, a New York City Housing Authority development in the Bronx, New York, culminating in the publication of a substantial book documenting the project produced by Dia Art Foundation.

At the South London Gallery, In-Between contributes to a body of work made over the past three years informed by a process of researching, collecting and analysing the formal composition of ruinous and bomb-damaged locations all over the world. As an expression of the aesthetic of destruction, ruin and disaster, it further develops ideas explored in the artworks Concordia, Concordia, 2012, shown in New York, Break-Through, 2013, presented in Naples, Abschlag, 2014, in Saint-Petersburg, and Höhere Gewalt, 2014, exhibited in Berlin. Reflecting on the Gramsci quote at the centrepiece of In-Between, Hirschhorn said; “I see this as the in-between-status of a journey or trajectory. To me, the quote is not about separating or opposing “creation” and “destruction”, but about the difficulty of positioning oneself in the midst of the moving world. The challenge of confronting the world’s reality stands between “creation” and “destruction”. In Between is the affirmation of precarious dimension, the dimension of the non-guaranteed.

 

Artist

Thomas Hirschhorn’s recent notable solo exhibitions include; Höhere Gewalt, Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin, Germany (2015); Flamme Eternelle, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France (2014); Gramsci Monument, Forest Houses, The Bronx, New York, USA (2013); Touching Reality, Institute Of Modern Art Brisbane, Brisbane, Australia (2013); Timeline: Work in Public Space, Dia: Chelsea, The Dia Art Foundation, New York, USA (2012); Crystal of Resistance, Swiss Pavilion, 54th Venice Biennale, Italy (2011); Too-too Much-Much, Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens, Deurle, Belgium (2010-09) and Thomas Hirschhorn: It’s Burning Everywhere, Dundee Contemporary Arts, Dundee, Scotland (2009) and Kunsthalle Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany (2011).

Notable group shows include; Atopolis, Mons, Belgium (2015); All The World’s Futures, 57th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy (2015); The Human Factor, Hayward Gallery, London, England (2014); Manifesta 10, The European Biennale of Contemporary Art, Saint-Petersburg, Russia (2014); Metamatic Reloaded, Museum Tinguely, Basel, Switzerland (2013-2014); Only Sculpture!, Kunsthalle Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany (2013); The Art of the Present, Helga de Alevear Collection, Centro Centro, Madrid, Spain (2013); Intense Proximity, La Triennale, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France (2012) and Masters of Chaos, Musée du Quai Branly, Paris, France (2012).

Hirschhorn’s works are included in prominent collections internationally, including among which the Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris; Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel, Switzerland; Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia; Tate Modern, London, England, Collection Inhotim, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.

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<p>Installation view of Thomas Hirschhorn’s<em> In-Between</em>, 2015. Courtesy Thomas Hirschhorn. Photo: Andy Keate.</p>

Installation view of Thomas Hirschhorn’s In-Between, 2015. Courtesy Thomas Hirschhorn. Photo: Andy Keate.