exhibition archive

#58
In Peril on the Sea: Sailing Ships, Stormy Seas
Curated by Clive Phillpot

28 January 2015 – 20 March 2015

exhibition info | press release | images | reviews | list of works | private view | events | publication | invitation

 

Private view: 27 January 2015 6:00–8.30pm

 

CHELSEA space is pleased to present the exhibition In Peril on the Sea: Sailing Ships, Stormy Seas curated by Clive Phillpot.

Lawrence Weiner
WE ARE SHIPS AT SEA NOT DUCKS ON A POND, Street poster
published by Air Gallery & Artangel Trust, London, 1986
© Lawrence Weiner.


Taking an excerpt from the text written for the booklet, A Voyage on the North Sea (1974) by the Belgian artist Marcel Broodthaers, “It is up to the attentive reader to find out what devilish motive inspired this book’s publication” as a provocation, the exhibition sets out to question and explore ‘motive’ and ‘decoy’ within artistic and curatorial practice.

Both a film and book, A Voyage on the North Sea were distributed together as part of the same package. Thematically connected, the works mutually consisted of 19th and 20th century nautical images including photographic reproductions of an amateur ‘grand master’ painting along with a photograph of a contemporary sailboat. This work, along with many of Broodthaers’ written, object-based and site-specific environments were not widely known in his lifetime – but this work has latterly been canonised within the sphere of contemporary art, not least in part by attention of the renowned US critic Rosalind Krauss in such works as A Voyage on the North Sea: Art in the Age of the Post-Medium Condition (2000).

Looking at artists who, like Broodthaers, approach art production from a post-medium perspective, the exhibition will display works from Lawrence Weiner and Ed Ruscha that contemplate the mysterious and somewhat perilous nature of making and showing art – by being, manifestly, ‘at sea’. Reproductions of nautical works by Willem van de Velde the Younger, Peter Monamy and J.M.W. Turner, unobtainable in their original formats, will be presented via forms of secondary documentation, endlessly accessible and reproducible via printed or digital means.

Book works by Helen Douglas and Elisabeth Tonnard as well as other works from the Special Collections at Chelsea will be on display alongside ephemera and other items.

 

Chelsea

 

Chelsea Arts Club Trust logo