Exhibition of new collage, ceramic and audio work by Sam Keogh opens at Kerlin Gallery

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, April 26, 2024


Exhibition of new collage, ceramic and audio work by Sam Keogh opens at Kerlin Gallery
Installation view.



DUBLIN.- Kerlin Gallery is presenting ‘Sated Soldier, Sated Peasant, Sated Scribe’, an exhibition of new collage, ceramic and audio work by Sam Keogh.

A series of large red rectangular surfaces are clustered at one end of the gallery, festooned with drawings of flowers and hands as well as a giant inhaler, a life size anthropomorphic hotdog and a pig with a knife in its side. Ceramic sculptures act as paper weights for some of them - a roast duck, a boiled egg with feet, as well as bits of reclining bodies piled on top of each other. Elsewhere in the gallery, a lone figure lays on its side, its back to the viewer. His hip and shoulder seem sunk into the polished concrete floor. As you walk around his form, you see that his eyes are open, but pupiless and vacant. A man’s voice reverberates throughout the space. It’s telling a story which links these disparate images and objects together.

Keogh mines this image for its utopian radicalism at a time of strict feudal power relations and peasant revolt. The fantasy of rest, pleasure and perpetual feasts depicted here might be read as an important contribution to a proto-communist imaginary. But Cockaigne is also a place where everything is cooked, and so closer to being dead than alive. The main figures are bloated, heavy and immobilised by their gluttony in this world of beige and brown where nothing seems to be growing, but instead slouches toward decomposition as time has slowed or stopped. In this sense, Bruegel’s The Land of Cockaigne can be read as a moralizing warning to the ‘work-shy’, that they would end up in a pleasurable but stodgy purgatory rather than Heaven. Keogh see’s these contradictory elements of the myth as being part of its persistence as fantasy. Its qualities of nonsense and impossibility don’t amount to a workable image of a potential future world, but instead appeal to the libidinal or bodily desires of the audience – things which don’t need to be understood to function.

Sam Keogh works with installation, sculpture, performance, drawing and collage. Live performances unfold in intricate built environments: installations incorporating diverse materials, from collages and painted panels to plastic skeletons, ceramics to gunge-soaked computer desks, sculptures of severed hands and discarded apple cores, plants and bits of rubbish.

These grotesque concoctions of image, object and detritus serve as props and visual cues for performances, but spill over with idiosyncratic detail and extraneous information – the physical remnants of a fictional world, they present an indeterminate space in which materials, memories and affects begin to smudge into each other. Keogh’s performances interweave research on diverse topics into meandering semi-fictional monologues that make surprising connections between political movements, biological processes, archaeology, housing, science fiction, or pop cultural phenomena. Like the sprawling and rebellious environments that house them, they present “a strange and abject cosmology of trash, contamination and revolt”.

Sam Keogh’s work has been exhibited at the Pompidou Centre, Paris; Tate Modern, London; GrazMuseum, Graz; Dortmunder Kunstverein; the Public School, New York; Eli & Edythe Broad Museum, Michigan State University; Extra City Kunsthal, Antwerp; Lismore Castle Arts; Douglas Hyde Gallery, The Irish Museum of Modern Art, Project Arts Centre and Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin. His most recent solo exhibitions include Goldsmiths CCA, London; Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris; Illuminations Gallery, Maynooth; 1646, The Hague and Mao Jihong Arts Foundation, Shanghai (all 2018). Keogh has participated in biennial exhibitions including the Lyon Biennale, steirischer herbst, EVA International and Glasgow International.










Today's News

January 22, 2022

At 83, Arne Glimcher indulges his inner curator

Phoenix Art Museum selects Jeremy Mikolajczak to serve as museum's new director and CEO in national search

Picasso's Surrealist masterpiece 'La Fenêtre Ouverte' to be offered at auction for the first time

Meat Loaf, 'Bat Out of Hell' singer and actor, dies

A dollhouse you could call home

New work by British artist Rose Wylie on view at David Zwirner

Christie's Americana Week totals $23,686,438

Regen Projects opens an exhibition of new works by Rachel Harrison

Renato Leotta's first exhibition at Sprovieri opens in London

Verisart announces its inaugural curated NFT auction on Artsy

Clare Lilley appointed new Director of Yorkshire Sculpture Park

Historic, contemporary, and never-before-displayed works pose timeless questions

Lawsuit says faculty at a top arts school preyed on students for decades

Award winning Iranian artist Mohammad Barrangi transforms Edinburgh Printmakers for first solo exhibition in Scotland

The Halsey Institute's new exhibition spotlights Native women

75 years after Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier, a major auction of moments and memories

Elza Soares, who pushed the boundaries of Brazilian music, dies at 91

Everett Lee, who broke color barriers on the conductor's podium, dies at 105

Hardy Kruger, German-born Hollywood star, is dead at 93

The Architecture Drawing Prize 2021 Exhibition opens at Sir John Soane's Museum

Taylor Mac's 'Fever Dream': Exploring the philosophy of the hang

Exhibition of new collage, ceramic and audio work by Sam Keogh opens at Kerlin Gallery

Brooklyn Public Library opens first ever Lenape-curated exhibition in New York

After being stuck in Russia, a director touches down in Germany

Diamond Art: The DIY Craft Art Lovers Can't Get Enough Of

How to Keep Construction Costs Low with Online Time Clock Software

How to Start A Boondoggle with 4 Strands

How Crucial Is It To Have A Good Number of Followers For a Business

Online casinos - Tips for making the right choice

I Own Ethereum, Says Billionaire Ray Dalio

How to Design a Perfect E-commerce Website in 2022?




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful