LONDON.- The Serpentine Gallery stages the first major UK exhibition by Swedish artist Klara Lidén. The exhibition, which is co-produced by the Serpentine Gallery and Moderna Museet, Sweden, includes a series of films showing the artist performing actions in both public and domestic spaces. The films are presented with newly commissioned architectural structures created by Lidén to respond to the context of the Serpentine Gallery.
Lidéns varied body of work has included building a house from discarded materials on the banks of the River Spree in Berlin, constructing paintings made from the accumulated layers of billboard posters, setting up an alternative free postal system in Stockholm and filming herself performing a wild dance amongst commuters on a train.
Lidéns films, which capture the actions she undertakes in public urban spaces, show her challenging the intended functions of the materials and spaces around her. Her psychologically laden performances are often subtly or overtly violent and played out in rough, unidentified landscapes, demonstrating the artists subversive responses to our social spaces and conventions.
Before turning to contemporary art Lidén studied architecture, an interest reflected in her investigations of public and private space. She has described her built structures as also un-building, re-cycling or improvising new uses for whats already been set up. Her public actions raise the question of re-appropriating privatized, urban space
with the body, its ways of moving and the temporalities it engages. Recalling a long history of performance art and conceptual work, Lidén reveals the hidden aggression and potential rebellion that rests under the surface of our cities and their inhabitants.
Lidén was born in Stockholm, Sweden in 1979 and lives and works in Stockholm and Berlin.