White Cube Hoxton Square is pleased to present an exhibition of sculpture by
Colombian artist Doris Salcedo. A distilled survey of important sculptures
made between 1989 and 2007, the exhibition has been organised to complement
Salcedo's installation at Tate Modern's Turbine Hall.
Salcedo's work functions as political and mental archaeology, using domestic
materials charged with significance and suffused with meanings accumulated
over years of use in everyday life. In his catalogue essay, Rod Mengham
describes Salcedo's work as a 'junction point, a crossing place for
different objects, forms and meanings'. Salcedo often takes specific
historical events as her point of departure, conveying burdens and conflicts
with precise and economical means.
In her ongoing series of furniture sculptures - eleven, including three new
works, will be exhibited at White Cube - Salcedo alters found wooden objects
such as beds, chairs and wardrobes, transforming them into sculptures that
take on the resonance of something lost, broken or mended. Apertures are
closed in - what were once drawers or glass doors are now filled with
fragments of clothes and concrete - as if the objects were suffocating or
suffering from an act of violence as things are forced unexpectedly,
brutally together. They bring to mind loss as much as survival and, like
emergency architecture, evoke a sense of making-do, a desperate
reconfiguration of fragments to enable one to keep going.
In her Atrabiliarios works, four of which are installed here, Salcedo places
objects, gathered from people affected by Colombia's fraught political
history, in niches behind a skein of taught cow bladder that is then sutured
closed. This placement turns the objects into immediate relics to create a
way to commemorate their past as everyday, domestic objects. Salcedo often
undertakes months of research before making a work in order to find a
subject that can be directly linked to a particular incident - such as
Noviembre 6 y 7, which she staged in Bogotá - or a motif alludes to a more
general history of oppression and tragedy.
During the past few years, Salcedo's work has become increasingly
installation-based, using both gallery spaces and outside locations to
create vertiginous environments charged with politics and history. Noviembre
6 y 7 (2002) was a commemoration of the seventeenth anniversary of the
violent seizing of the Supreme Court, Bogotá on 6 and 7 November, 1985.
Salcedo sited the work in the new Palace of Justice where, over the course
of 53 hours (the duration of the siege), wooden chairs were slowly lowered
against the façade of the building from different points on its roof,
creating “an act of memory” in order to re-inhabit this space of forgetting.
In 2003, in Istanbul, she made an installation on an unremarkable street
comprising 1,600 wooden chairs stacked precariously in the space between two
buildings. In 2004, in London at White Cube, Salecedo created Neither, an
extraordinarily charged yet discreet installation where a sharpened wire
fence seemed to have been embedded into the very walls of the gallery. More
recently, in 2005, at the Castello di Rivoli, Turin, Salecdo re-worked one
of the institution's major rooms by extending the majestic, vaulted brick
ceiling of the gallery. The installation subtly transformed the existing
space, evoking thoughts of incarceration and entombment.
Doris Salcedo has exhibited in group and solo exhibitions internationally
including 8th Istanbul Biennial (2003), Documenta XI (2002) and XXIV São
Paolo Biennial (1998). Solo exhibitions include Castello di Rivoli Museo
d'Arte Contemporanea, Turin (2005-2006), SF MOMA (1999 and 2005), Camden
Arts Centre, London (2001), Tate Gallery, London (1999) and New Museum of
Contemporary Art, New York (1998). In 2009 she will have a solo exhibition
at Museum of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia.
A fully illustrated catalogue, with an essay by Rod Mengham, will accompany
the exhibition.
White Cube is open Tuesday to Saturday, 10am to 6pm. For further
information, please contact Honey Luard or Sara Macdonald on +44 (0)20 7930
5373