Mark Leckey: Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials

Mark Leckey: Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials

WIELS Contemporary Art Centre, Brussels

Installation view, The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things, a Hayward Touring exhibition at De La Warr Pavillion, Bexhill on Sea, 2013. Courtesy the artist; Gavin Brown’s enterprise, New York; Daniel Buchholz Gallery Cologne/Berlin; and Cabinet, London.

October 7, 2014

Mark Leckey
Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials 

26 September 2014–11 January 2015

WIELS
Contemporary Art Centre
Avenue Van Volxemlaan 354
1190 Brussels
Belgium
Hours: Wednesday–Sunday 11–18h

T +32 (0) 2 340 00 53

www.wiels.org

Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials is British artist Mark Leckey’s largest exhibition to date. The title comes from a letter by Guillaume Apollinaire, in which he claims that what he and filmmaker Georges Méliès do is “lend enchantment to vulgar materials”; Leckey identifies a similar impulse at the heart of his practice. And that is precisely what the exhibition highlights by bringing together new and older pieces in each of the media the artist has worked in.

Spread across two floors of WIELS as well as the auditorium, the exhibition features nearly all of the artist’s videos, including Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore, the iconic 1999 video of dance hall youth culture that first brought the artist to fame, and other videos that have been rarely shown, alongside key sculptural works from the last decade, providing a long overdue survey of Leckey’s remarkable oeuvre.

The orchestration of lighting and mood, along with the arrangement of quasi-totemic elements in the different exhibition spaces, are integral to the artist’s conception of his exhibition. Throughout, he celebrates the things that have persistently fascinated him over the years, as well as the brands that made them: Fiorucci, Samsung, Jeff Koons, Felix the Cat (and, for this occasion, JCDecaux, Benson & Hedges and amazon.com). These recognizable “brands”—whether referring to industrially fabricated jeans or refrigerators, “signature”  sculptures or a cartoon character—are treated in Leckey’s oeuvre as stand-ins for their wider cultural significance and embodiments of that ineffable thing called desire. By observing, consuming, and even realizing himself in those brands (it was the Fiorucci clothing brand, after all, that made Leckey “hardcore,” as his 1999 video announced), the artist recognizes the pull they invariably have on us: the phantasies we associate with them, the covetousness they incite and the memories we might attach to them.

In addition to these works that look back and reveal how deeply influential the artist has been to a younger generation of artists, Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials includes a major new installation occupying the entire first floor of WIELS that acts an exhibition within the exhibition. Titled UniAddDumThs, the installation is a life-sized copy of The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things, a traveling exhibition Leckey curated for Hayward Touring in 2013. When asked to think about including (which is to say, redoing) Universal Addressability as part of his large-scale survey exhibition at WIELS, the artist provocatively proposed, instead, to construct a physical copy, or “dupe,” as he likes to call it, of the whole exhibition.

The result is UniAddDumThs, comprised of various 3D printed copies, 2D cardboard cut-outs, photographic reproductions, and other forms of replicas of the original objects in Universal Addressability, returning the “real” borrowed artworks to their previous status as digital information. This project, like Leckey’s larger oeuvre, testifies to the artist’s fascination with things both material and immaterial, precious and “vulgar,”  and his exploration with how these relate to and even construct our desires, fantasies, identities and memories.

Curated by Elena Filipovic

Mark Leckey: Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials is organised by WIELS. It is made in collaboration with the Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Donnaregina-Madre, Naples and Kunsthalle Basel. The Museo Madre will stage a seminar in connection with the project (winter 2014–15) and UniAddDumThs will travel to Kunsthalle Basel (March 5–May 31, 2015).

About the artist
Mark Leckey was born in 1964 in Birkenhead, England, and currently lives and works in London. The 2008 Turner Prize-winning artist studied at Newcastle Polytechnic, is a reader in fine art at Goldsmiths, London, and served as professor of film studies at the Städelschule Frankfurt am Main from 2005 to 2009.

Complementary programme

Look Who’s Talking: Elena Filipovic
22 October, 19h

Talk: Mark von Schlegell
“Against Raymond Chandler”
15 November, 15h

Look Who’s Talking: Simon Thompson
Date to be confirmed

Finissage event
11 January 2015, 18h

Publication
Accompanying the exhibition is Mark Leckey – On Pleasure Bent, the first comprehensive monograph on the British artist’s work. All the artist’s scripts to date appear together for the first time in this lavishly illustrated volume, which features newly commissioned essays, as well as an interview with the artist. Designed by Sara de Bondt, it is co-published by WIELS; Haus der Kunst, Munich; and Museo Madre, Naples with Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König, Cologne.

Press contact
Micha Pycke
micha.pycke [​at​] wiels.org / T +32 (0) 2 340 00 51 / M +32 (0) 486 680 070

 

Mark Leckey: Lending Enchantment to Vulgar Materials at WIELS, Brussels
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