What The City Left Behind

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NATHANIEL RACKOWE WHAT THE CITY LEFT BEHIND Black Shed Stacked, 2010. Timber shed, bitumen paint, household gloss paint, uorescent lights. 260 x 170 x 60cm LP28 & LP29, 2010. Timber, bitumen paint, aerated blocks, household gloss paint, uorescent lights. 60 x 40 x 160 & 40 x 55 x 175cm London 6, 2010. Bitumen paint on powder-coated aluminium.125 x 63cm Exhibition 17 September - 30 October 2010 Private view Thursday 16 September 6-9pm What the city left behind Nathaniel Rackowe BISCHOFF/WEISS 14A Hay Hill London W1J 8NZ [email protected] Tuesday - Saturday 10am - 6pm +44 (0) 207 629 5954 www.bischoffweiss.com Nathaniel-1.indd 3 Nathaniel-1.indd 3 12/08/2010 16:05 12/08/2010 16:05

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What the City Left Behind, Nathaniel Rackowe, 17th September - 30th October 2010

Transcript of What The City Left Behind

N AT H A N I E L R A C K O W EW H AT T H E C I T Y L E F T B E H I N DBlack Shed Stacked, 2010. Timber shed, bitumen paint, household gloss paint, !uorescent lights. 260 x 170 x 60cm LP28 & LP29, 2010. Timber, bitumen paint, aerated blocks, household gloss paint, !uorescent lights. 60 x 40 x 160 & 40 x 55 x 175cmLondon 6, 2010. Bitumen paint on powder-coated aluminium.125 x 63cm

Exhibition17 September - 30 October 2010

Private viewThursday 16 September 6-9pm

What the city left behindNathaniel Rackowe

BISCHOFF/WEISS14A Hay Hill

London W1J 8NZ

[email protected]

Tuesday - Saturday

10am - 6pm

+44 (0) 207 629 5954

www.bischoffweiss.com

Nathaniel-1.indd 3Nathaniel-1.indd 3 12/08/2010 16:0512/08/2010 16:05

G A R D E N F E N C E U P R I S I N GThere’s something profoundly otherworldly about Nathaniel Rackowe’s Garden Fence Uprising – almost as if it had simply materialised, emerging suddenly into plain sight. With its tilted angles and rearing prow, it gives the impression of, indeed, rising up at us; of heaving into view, dragging itself purposefully up from unknown depths: like a submarine, perhaps, some sleek and silent vessel; or something from the subconscious, some collective fear made manifest; or an embodiment of the suburban – not, that is, the suburbs as geographical construct, but rather the sub-urban: that which exists below the surface of a city, ignored or repressed; which doesn’t form part of a city’s conscious image.

It’s this obscure, submerged zone which Rackowe’s structure seems to have risen from, triumphantly, ominously; which, for that matter, all of Rackowe’s work seeks to evoke in some way: a terrain of in-between and inadvertent spaces, of makeshift and ad hoc constructions, of mundane and ersatz materials. Vacant lots, forgotten alleys, shabby lean-to’s – it’s spaces such as these, Rackowe’s work seems to suggest, that are equally, if not more, emblematic of the life of a city than any glitzy array of architectural landmarks.

Rackowe never attempts to define or encapsulate these sub-urban spaces – the notion would be contradictory, since they are, by their very nature, temporary and indeterminate. Rather, what we get in his work are glimpses and fragments: dark corners that he brings to light; objects whose outlines shift and rotate; fleeting images captured through drawing. The sense is of the city as something fugitive and furtive, undergoing constant upheaval and transformation, its subconscious forms continually threatening to erupt and take over.

Garden Fence Uprising can be seen in revolutionary terms, as the first wave of this revolt – its first solid victory, perhaps. Individually, these fencing units would appear lowly, insignificant, if even noticed at all; bandied together, their mass production becomes their strength, a collective demonstration of architectural impact – as they rise up, buoyed by insurgency, to claim their aesthetic dues. Bolted together, coated in waterproof bitumen, made to endure – the final structure becomes a kind of monument to itself: a symbol of liberation, a redemption of what the city left behind.

Gabriel Hoxhead

Nathaniel Rackowe (born in 1975) graduated with an MA from The Slade School of Fine Art, London in 2001. Solo shows include The Delfina Foundation, London (2010), Art Positions at Art Basel Miami Beach (2009), BISCHOFF/WEISS, London (2005 and 2007), Galerie Almine Rech, Paris (2007 and 2008). Group shows include Baibakov Art Projects, Moscow (2009), Total Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul (2009), Duve Gallery, Berlin (2009), Louise T Blouin Foundation, London (2008), Galerie Jan Wentrup, Berlin (2008), Artificial Light, MoCA Goldman Warehouse, Miami (2007).

Garden Fence Uprising, 2010. Garden fencing, bitumen paint, !uorescent lights, steel, cables. 5 x 3 x 3m

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