LONDON.- arebyte is presenting on my island none of this would be true. The exhibition brings together the work of 10 artists from London, Israel and the USA whose practices span sculpture, installation, photography, poetry, video and performance.
These artists are: Naama Arad, Guy Ben-Ner, Verity Birt in collaboration with Holly Graham and Richard-Forbes Hamilton, EdgarWalker, Gery Georgieva with music by Patchfinder, Joan Jonas, Terence McCormack, Hannah Regel and Mike Seaborne.
on my island none of this would be true explores the various interpretations and contradictions that islands summon in our minds. Islands are the place of freedom and adventure sold to us on billboards at Heathrow Airport but also the morning-after of the UKs Brexit wet dream. Islands are where identities and cultures meet to do commerce and forge empires, yet they are also the forgotten lands where reptiles are left in a permanent Paleolithic state.
The show takes its title from the last line of a poem called Security, written by Tom Chivers for his book Dark Islands (Test Centre, 2015). Throughout this collection of poems Chivers takes us on a voyage through a mythical urban landscape where he explores the image of the island both literally and metaphorically, as the poems address utopian and dystopian ideas, themes of isolation and escape, and a concern with the natural and urban environment.
For some like JG Ballards Robert Maitland, I am the island is the cry of a man who is struggling for control over his mind, body and environment. For others like John Donne, who famously wrote, no man is an island as he was facing his own demise, all humans are interconnected. on my island none of this would be true observes how artists interpret and reclaim these different narratives to reshape and make sense of the world.
The exhibition includes the following works:
Naama Arads EL AL, rebuilt from the original in 2012. Suspended sheets of paper depict the Arch of Constantine. The 1,700-year-old monument to masculine victory is shredded and left to hang
Guy Ben-Ner presents 1999 film Berkeleys Island, featuring the artist living a solitary life on a small sand island, set inside his kitchen. The film investigates the tensions between the filmmakers artistic career and his reality has a family man
Verity Birt presents Venus Anadyomene a three-channel video installation and collaborative performance with Holly Graham and Richard Forbes-Hamilton.
EdgarWalker, a collaborative duo of artists James Edgar and Sam Walker, present work Untitled (Barrier) is a part ready-made, part surrealist sculpture that emasculates the authoritative function of the conventional steel barriers seen across our cities
Gery Georgieva will perform on the opening night of the exhibition. Blurring the line between different artforms, Georgieva creates enticing performances that merge pop music, with traditional folk heritage. Georgievas performances, often filmed and later digitally manipulated, examine the complexities of cultural identity
Joan Jonas 1973 film Song Delay, made with several participants and friends consists of a number of sound-actions in which participants undertake playful gesture and actions within the urban landscape
Terence McCormack is an installation artist that visited several sites around London to create a new series of 35mm photographic slides that will be projected on the walls on the gallery
Hannah Regel has produced her sculptures What Transpires in the Field of a Body That is the Base of Her in situ, directly onto the gallery floor. The unfired terracotta works, lit-up from the inside, slowly crack and crumble as the ambient air-dries them out
Mike Seabornes Pura Foods factory shortly after closure, Orchard Place, Leamouth, 2005 is a black and white photograph of the old edible oils and fats factory that sat on the site of what is now the arebyte Gallery. It is from a series documenting the Lower Lea Valley during redevelopment prior to the 2012 London Olympic Games