Skarstedt presents Mike Kelley: Reconstructed History, an exhibition
featuring Kelley’s ink and collage works on paper created in
1989, offering new insights into a lesser-explored area of the
artist’s diverse oeuvre. The exhibition will feature the original 50
illustrations from Kelley’s Reconstructed History series and will be
on view at Skarstedt (550 W. 21st Street) from September 11
through October 25, 2014.
In Reconstructed History, Kelley imitated how tomorrow’s leaders
of society—the next generation—make their mark on the past
through the act of defacing textbooks with doodles and
notations—signifying their own ‘reconstruction’ while moving
towards the future. In keeping with his conceptual practice and
predilection towards using non-art objects as material, Kelley
explored the found textbook as medium. He mined yard sales for
used American History textbooks and graffitied over their pages.
Perverse scribbles of lewd comments and gestures enliven the
repressed nature of these seemingly heroic and historic images.
Utilizing the vernacular of scholarly tomes and creating
interventions on their pages, Kelley challenged traditional
attitudes towards history and education and questions the
societal and cultural values usually ascribed to these subjects.
This series of works prompts us to reconsider the way history
books communicate the stories of our predecessors to our successors, investigating the re-appropriation of meaning through the interpretation of the past. Through this lens, once bland textbook titles become ironic (‘A Record of Our Country’, ‘History for Young Citizens’). Kelley wrote, “The past is where these things belong—adored but not emulated.”
The works in the exhibition were famously compiled into a limited edition catalogue published in 1990, titled Mike Kelley: Minor Histories, Statements, Conversations, Proposals. Printed in script on faux parchment, Kelley’s introduction to the catalogue duplicitously recalls the colonial era in its typeface and scholastic tone. Editor John C. Welchman explains, “The images are not ‘found’ but made. The result is an elaborate hoax, one of
the more vivid of Kelley’s many efforts to perform, write, and represent through fictitious adopted personae.” Mike Kelley’s introductory essay from the 1990 catalogue will be included in the publication.
About Mike Kelley:
Mike Kelley was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1954. He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1976. His work has been exhibited extensively throughout the United States and Europe. Recent solo exhibitions include a major retrospective exhibition at MOCA, Los Angeles in 2014, MoMA PS1 in 2013-2014, HangarBicocca in Milan in 2013, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam in 2012-2013, the WIELS Centre d'Art Contemporain in Brussels in 2008, the Musée du Louvre in Paris in 2006 and the Tate Liverpool and the Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig (MUMOK) in Vienna in 2004. Kelley is represented in numerous international collections, as well as those of the Hammer Museum and the Los Angeles County Museum of
Art (LACMA). Kelley has participated in multiple Whitney Biennials and others held internationally. Mike Kelley was a prolific writer and critic himself, and his work has been featured in multiple publications. Mike Kelley lived and worked in Los Angeles.