Sharon Lockhart

Sharon Lockhart

Bonniers Konsthall

Sharon Lockhart, Milena, Jarosław, 2013, 2014. Three framed chromogenic prints, 128.8 x 103.3 cm. Courtesy the artist, neugerriemschneider, Berlin, Gladstone Gallery, New York and Brussels, and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles.

April 15, 2014

Sharon Lockhart 
Milena, Milena

April 16–June 29, 2014

Bonniers Konsthall
Torsgatan 19
SE-11390 Stockholm
Hours: Wednesday noon–8pm, 
Thursday–Sunday noon–5pm

T +46 (0) 8 7364248

www.bonnierskonsthall.se

Bonniers Konsthall is proud to present the first large-scale solo exhibition in Scandinavia of American artist Sharon Lockhart. The exhibition will be accompanied by a screening program and public talks. 

For the past two decades, Sharon Lockhart has developed a working method sensitive for capturing communities and individuals in their everyday lives. Her working process involves long periods of research in a given location, where she familiarizes herself with the local community, often forging deep friendships and initiating a strong collaboration. Her meticulous fieldwork is then transformed into painterly tableaux of still and moving imagery informed by anthropological research. Lockhart´s oeuvre is characterized by turning space, time and bodily movement of the everyday into rigorously composed photographic works as well as architectural film installation. The particularities of a given moment are transformed into reflections on human existence.

Milena, Milena is the second in an exhibition trilogy, or to be more precise, a narrative triptych that grows from Lockhart’s relationship with Polish teenager Milena. Lockhart first befriended Milena in 2009 in Łodź, Poland during the filming of Podwórka (included in the exhibition). Several years later, Lockhart rekindled her friendship with Milena and discovered Milena’s desire to write a book about her life. Triggering an ongoing dialogue between Lockhart and Milena, this imagined autobiography has become the impetus through which the two have explored the ambiguous autonomy of the young adult.

Spread across three institutions and unfolded over a span of three years, each iteration of Milena, Milena features a slightly varied selection of works and marks an organic progression to the overall project. Comprising research (CCA Warsaw, 2013), production (Bonniers Konsthall, 2014), and contextualization (Kunstmuseum Luzern, 2015), Milena, Milena‘s trajectory aims at reflecting both highlights of the artist’s 20-year career and her focus on a single character’s choreography of selfhood and identity. 

The exhibition trilogy includes a series of strategically selected identifications that claim the biographical dimension of Lockhart’s work, thus operating as (self-)portraits as well as projections. As such, the exhibition is framed by two works of a subtly biographical background: It opens with the cinematic tour de force of Double Tide (2009)—filmed in Maine, USA, where Lockhart spent her childhood—and concludes with the rarely exhibited series “Untitled Studies” (1993–ongoing), the artist’s photographic diary, composed of re-photographed snapshots found in her own family album. At the center of the exhibition’s narrative is Milena, an enigmatic figure who remains disquietly absent, distilling the different threads of identification in her very non-presence.

It is within the framework of this exhibition that the threads of identification and representation play out. Sharon Lockhart’s ethnographically influenced examination of authenticity, conditioned by sociological and psychological factors, as well as by behavioral signs of culture and the influence of collective consciousness, is echoed in a newly conceived series of three photographs of Milena—capturing her ambivalent relationship to the camera as well as her sense of agency towards her own representation—and celebrated in Lockhart’s experimental new work, executed in the traditional technique of stained glass. This medium marks a new stage of Lockhart’s ongoing, conceptual investigation of the ontological qualities of the image. In this monumental stained-glass tableau of Milena, Lockhart travels between photography, painting and moving image, generating a sense of uncanny instability which corresponds with the psychological condition of the main character, who is caught within the frame of the work while spelling the letters of her own name.

Lockhart’s new work is a study of intimacy, shaped largely by the artist’s reading of theoretical writings of Polish-Jewish educator, children’s author and pediatrician Janusz Korczak (1878–1942). A legend of his own time, Korczak experimented with the methods of institutional education, based on the developmental enhancement of a child’s inborn abilities. Representative of the social pedagogy approach to education and a pioneer of children’s rights, he envisioned a future in which children structured their own world and became experts in their own matters. He crystallized his knowledge of child psychology, while learning to “(speak) not to the children but with the children.”

Sharon Lockhart, born in 1964 in Norwood, Massachusetts, is an American artist and filmmaker. Her work has been shown at numerous exhibitions in the United States, Europe and Japan, including at the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, both in New York City, the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco, and the Kunsthalle Zurich, Switzerland.

Milena, Milena at Bonniers Konsthall is co-curated by independent curator Adam Budak and Bonniers Konsthall’s curator Camilla Larsson, following Budak’s curation of the first iteration of the exhibition at the CCA Warsaw. Milena, Milena was initiated by Adam Budak. The exhibition architecture was created by Los Angeles-based architectural firm Escher GuneWardena. For the construction of the stained glass work, Lockhart enlisted master Polish glass painter Piotr Ostrowski. With support from the Polish Institute in Stockholm. 

Program

“A single moment: towards the identity of a narratable self in Sharon Lockhart’s work”
April 16, 6pm 
Sharon Lockhart in conversation with the exhibition’s curators, Adam Budak and Camilla Larsson. This talk will evolve around the notion of the autobiography, self-portraiture, and the individual in relation to the collective. The talk is supported by the Polish Institute.

Sharon Lockhart at Cinemateket (The Swedish cinematheque)
Screening program
May 10, 4pm, Goshogaoka and Teatro Amazonas
May 14, at 6pm, Pine Flat

For more information about the exhibition and the programme, please visit www.bonnierskonsthall.se. For press images, visit Bonniers Konsthall’s image bank on mynewsdesk. For further information, please contact Sofia Curman, Information Officer at Bonniers Konsthall: sofia.curman [​at​] bonnierskonsthall.se / T +46 8 736 42 66.

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