BIRMINGHAM.- As Exciting As We Can Make It is a highlight of
Ikons 50th anniversary year and includes the work of Rasheed Araeen, Art & Language, Sue Arrowsmith, Kevin Atherton, Terry Atkinson, Gillian Ayres, Vanley Burke, Eddie Chambers, Agnes Denes, Charles Garrad, Ron Haselden, Susan Hiller, John Hilliard, Albert Irvin, Pieter Laurens Mol, Mali Morris, John Newling, Hugh ODonnell, Dennis Oppenheim, Cornelia Parker, Sean Scully, Terry Shave and John Stezaker.
This comprehensive selection of paintings, sculpture, installation, film and photography, much previously shown at Ikon, reviews a pivotal decade through the lens of a major regional gallery; a gallery that at the time was one of a small number of public spaces in the UK specialising in contemporary art.
The decade coincided with the rise of postmodernism a fast-moving zeitgeist that chimed in with broader cultural shifts in Britain, in particular the politics that evolved under the premiership of Margaret Thatcher. There was the famous return to figurative painting; a shameless appropriation that saw artists pick and mix from art history, non- western art and popular culture; and an enthusiastic re-embrace of Dada and the challenge to notions of self contained works of art through the increasing popularity of installation.
Ikon had a reputation by the end of the 1980s as a key national venue for installation. Oppenheims extraordinary work Vibrating Forest (1982), made from welded steel, a candy floss maker and unfired fireworks, will return to Ikon for the exhibition, alongside Hillers Monument (1981), a combination of park bench, audio recording and 41 photographs of memorial plaques now in the collection of Tate. Charles Garrads Monsoon (1986) subjects a small building, set out as restaurant somewhere in South East Asia, to theatrical effects of thunder and lightning in order to conjure up an environment which is extraordinarily evocative and transporting.
At the same time, Cornelia Parker will show a suspended piece in Ikons Tower Room comprising a circle of squashed silverware corresponding to 30 Pieces of Silver (1988), a major work from her early career, commissioned by Ikon and also in the collection of Tate. A kind of critical response to monumental floor-based sculpture, it also characteristically conflates ideas of preciousness and perceived cultural value with traces of a traumatic event.
John Stezakers series of Five Collages (1978) coupling soft-core pornography and romantic love photo-stories will be on display. Renowned for his smart conceptualism and use of appropriation through collage, Stezaker was arguably the first postmodernist to show at Ikon. Photographs by Vanley Burke, an artist from Birmingham concerned especially with black communities and culture in the UK, depict worship in a local church, family weddings and birthdays.
As Exciting As We Can Make It is an opportunity to consider and celebrate the achievements of Hugh Stoddart and Antonia Payne, Ikons directors during 1978 1989 who both demonstrated rare ambition in the face of local and national adversity. So too all the artists they worked with, many of whom either were appreciated at the time for their significance, or have since gone on to enjoy deserved recognition.
The culture and politics of the 1980s and its influence will be the focus of a related public programme, including artists talks and film screenings. A major publication accompanies As Exciting As We Can Make It, including an essay by Ikons current director, Jonathan Watkins, and contributions from Hugh Stoddart and Antonia Payne.
This exhibition is dedicated to the memory of David Prentice (1936 2014), a founder artist of Ikon.