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Galleon & Other Stories - The Saatchi Gallery
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Advertising guru Charles Saatchi founded the Saatchi Gallery in 1985
to familiarize the general public with what was then-undiscovered,
cutting-edge art of the time, and to showcase his personal collections. The assemblage of
this raucous, blunt, occasionally sublime work has been christened Britart. Visiting the
new gallery quarters, which opened in 2003, is akin to gamboling down a postmodern rabbit
warren, inserted into a rewritten Lewis Carroll novel. Tourists visiting the Houses of
Parliament are lured across Westminster Bridge to the London Eye, the oversized
Millennium Ferris wheel directly outside the 1908 County Hall. The Saatchi
exhibition is housed in a wing of County Hall, as a kind of meta-installation, shoehorned
in between the new London Aquarium and various offices and such commercial establishments
as a five-star Marriott hotel and a two-star Travel Inn.
Entering the
rotunda gallery hall, visitors to the current Galleon & Other Stories
exhibition are greeted by a pair of mawkish, gawking, fat American tourists (Duane
Hansons Tourists II, 1988), in typical
consumer-on-the-prowl befuddlement. Though easily mistaken for the real thing, they prove
to be made of auto body filler, fiberglass and mixed media with accessories. This morphing
of real, surreal, and hyperreal renders them indistinguishable from the crowds in the
street outside County Hall and frames the Britart aesthetic of consumable, mediated
hyper-reality.
The first work formally is Bryan Griffiths Beneath The Stride of Giants, a Viking ship made
entirely of recycled materials. Serving as the exhibitions standard bearer, the ship
embodies another Britart aesthetic principle-- art as archaeology. The vessel itself
appears to be carefully hand-crafted from warm, brown woods, but upon closer inspection
turns out to be an assemblage of all manner of postmodern cultural effluvia, a veritable
Noahs ark of disposable consumer excess. The Griffiths piece is flanked on either
side with several pieces of monument-sized, carved wood statuary by Ann Chu, such as the Tomb of the King and Queen (2002), suggesting
mighty civilizations now lost.
For the Galleon & Other Stories exhibition the rotunda
gallery houses an array of human, or nearly human, or formerly human bodies. Several works
by Damien Hirst (the guy who does
Each exhibition bay
surrounding the rotunda contains an installation piece. One featured artist is the team of
brothers Jake and Dinos
Chapman and examples of their works on display include Great Deeds against the Dead (1994) -- identified
as an interpretation of Goya, dismembered mannequins as toys -- and DNA Zygotic Acceleration, Biogenetic, Desublimated
Libidinal Model (Enlarged x 1000) (1995), a fused cluster of genital-less pre-teen
girls, sprouting erect penises instead of noses, which create a single
hermaphroditic torso. These have been characterized as a series of fourteen-year-old
boys gross out fantasies, playfully transforming human beings into toys,
a kind of Kantian purposiveness without purpose, or futile instrumentality
Frankenstein as horror and satire.
For Angel (1997), Ron Mueck positions a more
human-appearing mannequin, an angel-as-a-regular Joe, sitting on a chair,
bored, with nothing to do. The caption playfully suggests all is well (or is
it?), continuing the collections irony mixed with heavy-handed, tabloid-press
style overstatement. The works are very bluntly suggestive, but coming from the tail end
of the most violent and self-destructive century in human history, where would hyperbole
leave off?
There are more mannequin mutants by the Chapman brothers, more Damien
Hirst (Hymn, a painted bronze blow-up of a
high-school toy human anatomy model), Tracey Emins My Bed (1998), (her actual garret boudoir), Ron
Muecks Dead Dad (a one-meter long naked man on the floor), and
other works which changed British art. Out one doorway stands Sarah
Lucas Tongue and Groove, a chair clothed
in a mans underwear and a large wooden erect penis penetrating from the seat,
formalizing figurative speech to confront the ridiculousness of sexual
stereotypes. Half blocking another corridor passage stands Gavin Turks Pop (1993), a life-size statue (mannequin) of the
artist as Sid Vicious as Elvis Presley, pointing a revolver.
The side galleries offer more schizophrenic variety, more nightmarish
whimsy, more ironic self-delight, more aesthetic riddles. There are five landscapes by
Peter Doig in vaguely expressionist style, free of self-irony. Dutch artist Marlene
Dumas Young Boys (1993) features a row of
naked young boys. (Its suggestive, the artist has stated, It
suggests all sorts of narratives. But it doesnt really tell you whats going on
at all.) Kate MccGwires nearby arrangement of 22,000 chicken wishbones in a
hypnotic spiral covers an entire wall.
Progressing down the gallery corridor, moving from one small side room
to the next, the visitor encounters more stuff an electrified room (Richard
Wilsons 20:50), neon signs, more
furnishings from fast-food outlets (Mally Mallinson's JFC Burgers), more art, more clutter. Gavin
Turks found-object sleeping bag is positioned in the middle of a corridor floor, as
if actually being used by a homeless person. Here too is Simon
Pattersons parody of the London Underground map, The Great Bear (which replaces tube station names
with those of celebrities) it is for sale at bookstores, poster shops, and souvenir
stands all over London. Simon Bedwells found posters (2003-2004), Festival of Psychologies and The Rich Will Always Be With Us (and others) line
hallway walls like Underground advertising placards.
It is fortunate that the current show mixes in works from the permanent
collection. On May 24, 2004, a fire (believed arson) in a storage warehouse in east London
destroyed over 100 works from the Saatchi collection. Some celebrated works (by Hirst,
Emin, Turk, Gary Hume, Tim Noble and Sue Webster, and others) are now already confined to
historical memory. And at least one news dispatch has hit the wire services, ironically
noting a work of art in an art gallery in London has been discovered thrown away by
maintenance staff, who had mistaken the art for rubbish.
Saatchi has been criticized for his overly enthusiastic collecting and
the resultant superabundance of works collected together under one roof at one time. It
would be easy to suggest that his vision is too much caught up in his collecting bug and
the acquisitive materialist spirit of our age -- the Saatchi exhibition is
enthusiastically Rabelaisian wicked fun. Beyond the ironic self-parody, frequently puerile
preoccupations of the subject matter, and the mask of surface cynicism there also seems to
lie a deeply religious, that is to say spiritually thirsty, spirit here. It is summed up
in Glenn Brown's homage Dali-Christ (1992),
wherein the great Salvador Dali is revered as the godfather of Britart.
September 11, 2004 - Les Wright