Patriots
Oct 11 - Nov 10, 2018
Press release for exhibition Patriots
Hew Locke
Patriots
October 11 – November 10, 2018
Opening Reception: October 11, 6-8 PM
P.P.O.W is pleased to present Patriots,
the gallery’s first exhibition with multimedia artist Hew Locke. The
exhibition will continue Locke’s investigation into the role public statues
play in the way national identity and history are formed, an element of his
practice that he has been exploring since 2002. This interest was initially
born out of seeing a statue of Queen Victoria taken down during his childhood
in Georgetown, Guyana – an event that toppled his notion that the status quo
was in fact static. Later, while living in London, Locke became fascinated with
the Victorian statues that dotted the city, emblematic sculptures that were so
visible that they had essentially become invisible to passersby. Embarking on a
project that he dubbed the “Impossible Proposals,” Locke began photographing
these iconic statues – from Richard the Lion Hearted, to the slave trader
Edward Colston, to Edward VII – and then embellishing the photographs with
objects, creating elaborate fetish figures imbued with a history that was
largely being overlooked.
The exhibition at P.P.O.W will take as its starting point
a series of contentious sculptures in the US, including of Peter Stuyvesant, George
Washington, J Marion Sims, Alexander Hamilton, and Christopher Columbus, among
others, several of which have been the subject of debate for removal over the
past several years. Inspired by a tradition in Brussels in which different
groups have the opportunity to dress up an iconic cupid figure in different
costumes to represent their ethnicity or particular interest, Locke here
envisions the opportunity for various ethnic groups to express their
relationship to these figures through an elaborate and beautiful costuming
ritual. After creating large-scale photographs of these statutes Locke richly
decorates them, creating Baroque-like depictions of these figures.
Among the works on view will be a statute of George
Washington decorated with Indian replica war medals, Pre-Colombian cut-outs,
silver dollars, an illustration of a slave being tortured by William Blake, and
a giant Manilla coin – a slave trading coin – dangling from his forearm. The
work explores the relationship between finance and power, and the way in which
Washington’s history has been revised to largely exclude the fact that he owned
nearly 300 slaves. The portrait will illustrate the long and ongoing timeline
of cause and effect and the arc of history that has followed since his
presidency. J. Marion Sims – the only photograph on view of a statue that has
been removed – will be covered with an image based on one of the women he
experimented on, as well as a traditional African Luba carving, depicting a
woman holding her breasts – a carving that references a woman holding secrets.
He will be covered in small hessian sacks that have Cowrie shells and cheap
badges of the Hippocratic sign attached, with a laurel crown on his head. The
resulting work envisions him as a nearly heroic figure, an homage to the way he
was portrayed historically. Together the works explore the complexity of
opinion and perspective surrounding these historical figures and New York
landmarks, overturning the notion that the debates surrounding the statues and
the figures’ roles in history have been settled, and illustrating the lasting
effects of these “patriots’” actions hundreds of years later.
Also included will be “Song of the South,” a series of drawings
created on real confederate shares that reference black minstrel history. The
works recall Locke’s many trips to Georgia as a child to visit his father
encountering objects in antique shops that reflected the South’s dark history.
The works on view not only explore these ideas of Patriotism and Americanism
through what Locke describes as his Guyanese point of view, but reflect his
many encounters in the US over the past several decades. The exhibition also
continues Locke’s interest in exploring the lasting impact of Colonialism, and
will include a 9-foot-long refugee boat, embellished and installed in the
backroom of the gallery. The installation, which addresses the desperation of
people trying to cross the ocean to safety, will be installed against a
backdrop of wallpaper made up of confederate shares and maps of Africa and
South America. The work is in conversation with the photographs of the statues
on view, as Locke imagines these new immigrants walking around and encountering
these statues, trying to assess what these people and this history means to
them.
Hew Locke was born in Edinburgh, UK and moved to
Georgetown, Guyana as a young child. Locke eventually returned to the UK in the
90s to complete his MA in Sculpture at the Royal College of Art. Locke
currently lives and works in London.
Work by Locke has been exhibited extensively throughout the US and
Europe, including in The Folkestone Triennial (2011), the 54th and
55th Venice Biennale (2011, 2013), Deptford X (2012, participating artist
curator), Prospect New Orleans Contemporary Art Biennial, New Orleans, LA
(2014) and Hangzhou Triennial of Fiber Art (2016). Selected shows include
National Portrait Gallery, London, UK; Imperial War Museum, London, UK; El
Museo de Bario, New York, NY; Fondation Clément, Le Francois, Martinique; Bell
House, Prague, Czech Republic; Kunsthal KAdE, Amersfoort, Netherlands; Tate
Britain, London, UK; Victoria &
Albert Museum, London, UK; New Art Gallery, Walsall, UK; Rivington Place,
London, UK; Bluecoat Gallery. Liverpool, UK; British Museum, London, UK; New
Art Exchange, Nottingham, UK; Museum of Art and Design, New York, NY; Atlanta
Contemporary Arts, Atlanta, GA; Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY; and Perez Art Museum,
Miami, FL. Locke's multidisciplinary work is in permanent collections,
including the United Kingdom's Government Art Collection; Miami Art Museum,
Miami, FL; Tate Gallery, London, UK; Arts Council of England; Brooklyn Museum,
Brooklyn, NY; Perez Art Museum, Miami, FL; Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art,
Kansas City, MO; Kansas City Collection, Kansas City, MO; RISD Museum Providence, RI; New Art Gallery, Walsall, UK;
Victoria & Albert Museum, London, UK; British Museum, London, UK; and the
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, UK, among others.