Tala Madani And Marvin Gaye Chetwynd Deliver One Of The Most Deliciously Weird Art Shows Of All Time
There was a time, back before art school separated out the serious
artists from the rest, when our childhood journals were filled with the
naughty meanderings of the imagination. Adult life was but a distant
freak show of ambiguous responsibilities, bizarre rituals, bathroom time
and of course, the sex.
Both painter Tala Madani and multimedia performance artist Marvin Gaye Chetwynd
transport us back to this wild age, when the bizarre amateur won out
over the trained scholar every time. Though neither of the artists are
in any way, shape or form amateurs, their work thrives off the hunger of
the untrained eye, one that isn't afraid to get sloppy. The two iconic
female artists are simultaneously exhibiting at the Nottingham
Contemporary, which promises to be a delirious, playful, absurd and --
in its own way-- quite serious affair.
Tala Madani, Rear Projection: Soft, 2013. Courtesy of the artist and Pilar Corrias, London
Madani,
who moved from Iran to the U.S. at 10 years old, creates punchy
abstractions that explore the strange bodily moments we experience
together and apart. Fascinated with power play, group dynamics and the
space between machismo and homoeroticism, Madani crafts absurd,
cartoonish scenarios that touch on the private parts of everyday life.
Bellies, butt cracks and levitating poops combine the sense of humor of a
prepubescent boy with biting feminist satire. Bringing private, and
often shameful, bodily experiences to the public consciousness, Madani
experiments with the boundaries of personal experiences that become
shared visually.
Tala Madani, Popular Toys, 2013. Courtesy of the artist and Pilar Corrias, London
For
her current exhibition, Madani presents mutated illustrations from
Ladybird books -- an outdated, heteronormative series that partially
taught Madani English when she first moved to the states. The artist
mixes the 1950s-styled images with her own breed of little men; their
pink naked bodies scrambling our childhood ideas of an ordered
existence. The show also features work from Madani's signature subject
-- an alternate world without women, where men are left to fumble
through all their macho rites on their own. Part synchronized dance,
part beefed-up rumble, the gently rendered images sharply criticize the
pathetically rendered sex.
Installation
view, Home Made Tasers, New Museum, New York, 26 October 2011 – 01
January 2012, Copyright the artist, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ, London
Marvin
Gaye Chetwynd, previously known as Spartacus, was raised around film
sets and props -- her mother is an Oscar-winning production designer.
The Turner Prize nominee channels her cinematic upbringing into her
anarchic production sets, overflowing with piƱata-esque stimuli and
literary references. Imagine a drag carnival referencing Dante, Karl
Marx and Starship Troopers and you'll get a sense of the calculated
madness that ensues.
Marvin Gaye Chetywnd, Gatekeeper, 2011, Copyright the artist, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ, London
Chetwynd was born Alalia, then changed her name to Spartacus, before becoming Marvin Gaye. "Artists should live experimentally, I think, so this was just a simple and cheap idea I tried, to see what would happen,"
she told The Guardian. This easy, breezy -- yet aggressively
experimental -- attitude pervades Chetwynd's performances and
sculptures, giving them a fiery energy, as if folks from the literary
canon, cult film, the streets and the imagination all came together for a
raucous parade.
Accompanying the show, Chetwynd will also
perform a new piece entitled "The Green Room," which deals with issues
of personal debt... while incorporating the temple from the movie "Cat
Woman" and Chewbacca’s nuclear family from the famed flop "Star Wars
Holiday Special." Her exhibit will also feature two large, performative
sculptures, a Brainbug and a Catbus, which viewers can enter and use as a
video lounge.
Tala Madani, Morris Men with Piss Stain, 2013. Courtesy of the artist and Pilar Corrias, London
Marvin Gaye Chetwynd, Cousin Itt, 2004. Copyright the artist, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ, London
Tala Madani, Enema up the ladder, 2012. Private Collection, courtesy Jeremy Lewison Ltd.
Marvin
Gaye Chetwynd, Diorama. 2012. Installation view, Home Made Tasers, New
Museum, New York, 26 October 2011 – 01 January 2012, Copyright the
artist, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ, London
Tala Madani, X Men, 2013. Courtesy of the artist and Pilar Corrias, London
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