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CONTEXTS

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WHITECHAPEL EXHIBITION: A Century of the Artist’s Studio: 1920 – 2020 

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This exhibition is a 100-year tour-de-force of the studio through the work of artists. I became aware and further refined my understanding of the work of artists who use the studio and creative spaces as inspiration in their work. In the ‘The Secret life of The Studio’ section, the idea of the studio as a “treasure trove of found objects and images” that can provide exciting opportunities for inspiration was very interesting to me. I found a new awareness of artists such as Andrew Grassie and Paul Winstanley who make work in response to the studio. 

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Andrew Grassie, Floorr, 2016

Andrew Grassie’s is Interested in the hidden world of production and the multiple hands that go into making an artwork, he is interested in the “documentation and origination of art”, much as I am. His work has revolved around “showing us scenes in galleries, museums, historic collections and storerooms”. I feel and affinity for his desire to show an “aura or mystery around simple objects”  and I am interested in the way he meticulously documents creative spaces through the painstaking craft of egg tempera. Paul Winstanley whose series "Art School" in the exhibition's words "represents a sustained homage to that fast-disappearing british instituition, the art school" was also relevant to what I was producing as well as developing my understanding of the idea of the change that has occurred in terms of art institutions and studio space in the 21st Century.

I was further thrilled by the ‘Eating the studio’ segment, thinking about how things in creative spaces, such as tools, architecture or the “patina of...surfaces” may provide the building blocks to create new works of art. The idea that these studio objects portray the life of the artist and “connect their practice with the histories of place or with lived reality” was very poignant. This made me consider the idea that creative places which I and artists use can become autobiographical and about our own experiences. I felt a strong connection with the work of walead Beshty as she was also thinking about her tools and the creative space around her as inspiration for her work. 

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[Walead Beshty, Prologue to a partial disassembling of an Invention, Without a Future: Helter Skelter and Random Notes in which the Pulleys and CogWheels Are Lying Around at Random All Over the Workbench], Whitechapel Gallery 2020

The very title for the work is based around a lecture by filmmaker Hollis Frampton, who discusses “the meaning in things that are otherwise seen as dormant or no longer in use”. The objects on show are taken from thousands of defunct tools and materials the artist had lying around in his studio. I found his choice of composition an extremely ambitious way of presenting the process of recording the histories of obsolete objects that have personal significance to the artist. I am drawn to the notion of the tool as an extension of the self for the artist and I find the work questions the meaning and value in things that once had significance as well as the value of recording them, seen in the finished outcome.  It may prove significant to me to think about making and presenting my own work as a diary of my journey of sensory experience and discovery. 

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