LONDON.- Pace London announces White Black Gold, an exhibition of new work by Keith Coventry. The exhibition will be on view at the ground floor galleries of 6 Burlington Gardens from 27 April to 28 May 2016.
In White Black Gold, Coventry continues his multi-decade exploration of the relationship between Modernism and its manifestations in the contemporary. In the exhibition comprised of two new bodies of work and a monumental bronzeCoventry disabuses Modernism of its utopian promise, locating its residue in the debris of the social landscape.
In the new Pure Junk series, Coventry constructs white monochromatic paintings of smoothly sloping forms derived from the contours of McDonalds golden arches logo. Constructed from wood, muslin, beeswax, gesso, glass and wood, these works assume a low-relief sculptural presence, emphasizing the object quality of painting. Evoking a strand of Modernist and post-war art, Coventry establishes a link between a hygienic aesthetic free of decoration and this larger emergence of junk food, which assumes further complexities in light of the all-natural media of the work.
A second group of new Junk works employs the geometry of the McDonalds logo in small bronze and gold sculptures that literalise the golden arches euphemism. The use of bronze transforms the design motif of hamburger wrappers and, in Coventrys words, ennobles the ignoble.
Destroyed Shop Window (2016), a cast bronze work modelled after a bombed-out storefront, will span the gallery. In much the same way that the Junk works lend a sense of permanence to the discarded, this large sculpture memorializes a transient moment in a buildings history, capturing it in a state of disuse while it awaits demolition or reconstruction. The sculpture highlights the lattice skeleton of the building, and, in Coventrys conjuring of art history, evokes Modernisms leitmotif: the grid. In contrast to historical notions of the grid, however, Coventry imposes a narrative on it, forcing the grid to be read in a specific context.
Keith Coventry (b. 1958, Burnley, United Kingdom) attended Brighton Polytechnic and received his masters degree from the Chelsea School of Art in 1982. In 1988, he co-founded the exhibition space City Racing, which operated in London for a decade; in 2001, City Racing was the subject of an exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art, London.
Solo exhibitions of Coventrys work have been presented at Lieu dart Contemporain, Narbonne, France (2014); Modern Collections, London (2013); The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham (2012); PEER, London (2012); Museum of London (2010). In 2006, Tramway, Glasgow, presented a midcareer survey of the artists paintings. His work has been included in major group exhibitions including Sensation at the Royal Academy of Arts (1997) and Adventures of the Black Square: Abstract Art and Society, 19152015 at Whitechapel Gallery (2015) and is in numerous public collections worldwide including the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Tate, London; and Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
Coventry lives and works in London. This is his second solo exhibition at Pace.