LONDON.- The exhibition Performer/Audience/Mirror celebrates moving image and features work from the 1960s to the present day by eighteen internationally acclaimed artists, including Marina Abramović, John Akomfrah, Allora & Calzadilla, Francis Alÿs, Cory Arcangel, Art & Language, Gerard Byrne, Nathalie Djurberg & Hans Berg, Ceal Floyer, Ryan Gander, Dan Graham, Rodney Graham, Christian Jankowski, John Latham, Jonathan Monk, Wael Shawky, Santiago Sierra and Sean Snyder. Borrowing its title from Dan Grahams 1977 performance at De Appel Arts Centre in Amsterdam, in which the artist described himself and the seated audience in front of a mirrored wall, the exhibition draws on the interactivity and reflexivity of film and explores its importance as a media for experimentation, performance and documentation.
The exhibition is organised into three distinct sections that draw on the subjects of Grahams performance performer, audience and mirror with each section showing a looped showreel of films. The Performer section of the programme highlights the association between performance and film through the works of artists such as Marina Abramović, Gerard Byrne, Nathalie Djurberg and Hans Berg, Ryan Gander, Rodney Graham and Christian Jankowski. These works explore our understanding of performance in film both within a conventional contemporary art setting and within the broader cultural context of theatre, comedy and narration. Here the newest work in the exhibition, Worship (2016), a claymation film by Nathalie Djurberg and Hans Berg, is making its premiere in the UK, following successful reception in Sweden and Austria.
The Audience programme, located in the main gallery space, takes place within Dan Grahams pavilion, Greek Meander Pavilion, Open Shoji Screen Version (2001). The pavilion creates an intimate sculptural environment to explore the significance of architecture and space in film and allows the audience to more actively engage with the works on view. Films by artists including Art & Language, Ceal Floyer, Ryan Gander, Jonathan Monk and Santiago Sierra are being screened on monitors housed in the large-scale structure. Highlighting reflexivity in film, these works also are visible from the outside through a griddled shoji screen and reflections in the pavilions two-way reflective glass. Grahams documentation of his performance Performer/Audience/Mirror are also beingscreened, alongside the earliest work in the show, Speak (1962) by John Latham. Following a recent London exhibition dedicated entirely to Lathams spray paintings, this screening offers a rare opportunity to become acquainted with the artists avant-garde film practice.
Screened in the third gallery space, the Mirror programme reflects the social, political and historical significance of film and its potential to act as a mirror on society. A recent film by John Akomfrah, whose film installations The Airport and Auto Da Fé (2016) are on display at Lisson Gallery New York from 24 June until 12 August 2016, is being presented, alongside work by other artists including Allora & Calzadilla, Francis Alÿs, Cory Arcangel, Wael Shawky and Sean Snyder.