Tanya Bonakdar Gallery is pleased to present a major solo exhibition of work by Gillian Wearing. In a wide-ranging
vocabulary, Wearing presents a profound selection of work that spans the breadth of her production since her last solo
exhibition in New York in 2003. Featuring video installations, photographic series and sculptural work, the exhibition will
occupy both floors and all four public gallery spaces. Continuing the artist's renowned and influential exploration of identity,
performance and storytelling, Wearing describes narratives that land strikingly between the public and private, fiction and
documentary, the raw improvisation and the carefully staged. Projecting these issues through a lens of personal memory,
cultural history and the media, a unique and compelling psychological resonance persists throughout.
In the main gallery space on the ground floor, Snapshot is a monumental seven-channel video installation that pays homage
to the evolution of still photography through the implementation of moving images. Tracing the evolution of still portraiture
throughout the passage of time, an explicit timeline of sorts is presented, informed by old photographs but evoked through
moving imagery. Seven different women at various stages of life, from youth to old age, are depicted on seven monitors
corresponding to eras in the 20th century, as an anonymous narrator describes memories that are at once personal and
universal.
This exploration of the feminine identity is counterbalanced by the presentation in the second ground floor gallery, featuring
Wearing's latest video work, Bully. A large projection presented in a black box space, Bully stems from the artist's highly
acclaimed feature length film Self Made, 2010, and confronts the viewer with an individual's catharsis. In a revelatory
moment, we follow the construction of a fiction as it transcends one character's personal story to become a reality for all
participants.
In the first upstairs gallery, Wearing presents another major video installation, Secrets and Lies. Within the confines of a
small chamber, not unlike a confessional box, one is met by one masked figure after another recounting an intimately kept
personal secret. The participants, gleaned from announcements placed online, answered a call to "Confess All On Video."
The obscured features of the participants combined with their brutally open honesty, challenges notions of the self, and the
very basics of portraiture. The masks both protect the identity of the confessor as well as empower them to be able to
speak the truth.
In the main upstairs gallery, Wearing exhibits three major photographic works, each a self-portrait of the artist posed as
figures from recent art history: Diane Arbus, Robert Mapplethorpe, and Andy Warhol. Each of these mythologized artists'
practice profoundly influences Wearing's own, and for each composition, the artist dons costume and prosthetics to
occupy her subjects' place. In the same room, as if in reverence to these three iconic personas, People, 2011 is Gillian
Wearing's most recent photograph. Inspired by Dutch still life paintings of the 17th century, the piece depicts an elegant
and complex arrangement of silk flowers in a small vase. One can only imagine the explosion of color, otherwise more
intense and unreal due to the artificial coloration of the faux flowers. These flowers will never wilt or die, and while the piece
references the past, the artificiality of its construction is not disguised and cannot be ignored.
Finally, two small bronze figures, Gervais, 2010 and Terri, 2011, are the first of a new body of work that Wearing refers to
as "social sculpture." Depicting life-like renderings of apparently everyday people, plaques below the sculptures describe the
heroic role each has held within the broader context of their society. Of particular significance for this exhibition in New
York, Wearing approached NYPD officer Terri Tobin, a hero of the 9/11 disaster, to model for the depiction of "Heroine."
Ten years later, through the simple bronze figure, Wearing discreetly resounds the monumental in the everyday man and
woman.
Recipient of Britain's most prestigious Turner Prize, Gillian Wearing is internationally regarded as one of the most
influential artists of her generation. In the past year, Wearing"s work has been exhibited in the context of numerous
influential museum exhibitions in New York and throughout the country, including The Talent Show at MoMA PS1, New
York, which originated at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. Her work was included in the recent exhibition Haunted, at
the Guggenheim Museum, New York, and was also part of The Original Copy: Photography of Sculpture, 1839 to Today, at
the MoMA, New York. This year, Wearing's new feature-length video Self Made was chosen to open MoMA's program
Documentary Fortnight 2011: MoMA's International Festival of Non-Fiction Film and Media. In May, the work is also slated
to open the series Artists' Cinema at the Walker Art Center.
In addition to these prestigious exhibitions in the United States, next year the Whitechapel Gallery in London is planning an
extensive exhibition of Wearing's work, that will continue to K20, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen in Düsseldorf,
Germany, and a new monograph will be published to accompany the shows.