Rob Chavasse / Slow Dance
25.02 – 01.04.17
David Dale Gallery & Studios
161 Broad Street , Glasgow G40 2QR
David Dale Gallery are delighted to present Slow dance, an exhibition of new installation and video work by London based artist Rob Chavasse. Chavasse’s practice addresses systems within economies and society that are generally obfuscated. Using isolated cyclical fragments, Chavasse frames the site of analysis in the symbolism of the ubiquitous
The exhibition opens David Dale Gallery’s 2017 exhibitions programme, Annex. A programme of solo exhibitions, Annex intends to provoke artistic responses to the condition of using both gallery space and external warehouse. Communication between these spaces and responses to it, as it develops across all six exhibitions, will be central to this project.
In Slow Dance, the gallery will bring together a troop of portable oil-filled radiators, congregating to tell their oddly familiar story. In the warehouse, a video installation will trace subtle movements set in motion by such meetings. In both cases, the commonplace will speak through its own rhythms. The dance of the quotidian, beautifully unsettling in its pervasiveness.
Nostalgia
really works for me
really works for me
A compound is a substance made up of more than
one entity; a mixture with a shared purpose.
one entity; a mixture with a shared purpose.
It is also a place that I grew up in.
I didn’t have a street, a village or a town.
There would have been a district, but I never asked its name and no one thought
to tell me.
There would have been a district, but I never asked its name and no one thought
to tell me.
As
a child I lived on a compound in the desert; a square territory situated in
sand surrounded by a white wall ten foot high. The entrance (or mouth) was a
large mechanised gate that let out an aggressive clunk each time one of the two
brown men – who’s job it was to guard – pressed the release button. Behind the
wall and the gate were forty villas.
a child I lived on a compound in the desert; a square territory situated in
sand surrounded by a white wall ten foot high. The entrance (or mouth) was a
large mechanised gate that let out an aggressive clunk each time one of the two
brown men – who’s job it was to guard – pressed the release button. Behind the
wall and the gate were forty villas.
Inside
the compound everything functioned uniformly. A smooth concrete road mapped out
a single grid that separated an inner and outer circuit of semi-detached homes.
The plan was designed around geometric shapes, right angles and rows that were
aesthetically pleasing. No space was without purpose. Greenery of trees, shrubs
and sub-shrubs were allocated, planted at regular distances in identical
configurations. The symmetry of this vegetation, in a landscape with no rivers,
added to the orchestrated farce that was living in this place.
the compound everything functioned uniformly. A smooth concrete road mapped out
a single grid that separated an inner and outer circuit of semi-detached homes.
The plan was designed around geometric shapes, right angles and rows that were
aesthetically pleasing. No space was without purpose. Greenery of trees, shrubs
and sub-shrubs were allocated, planted at regular distances in identical
configurations. The symmetry of this vegetation, in a landscape with no rivers,
added to the orchestrated farce that was living in this place.
The villas were bite size chunks of sameness
from foundation to finish. Residents choose their own toppings. Siamese twins
joined in the middle, the villas had flat roofs and beige stucco walls the
texture of which I would pick at until my bitten fingernails bled. All the
external wood was varnished a dark mahogany, the heat making its lacquer peel.
I picked at this too, pulling away large flakes to expose the wood’s untreated
surface. The palette of the compound was neutral, the finish was new, unused,
unweathered. The past happened to other places. Unforgiving materials reassured
us of this: marble stairs and tiled balconies; surfaces hostile to young wet
feet. My knees are still a cross hatch of fine silver scars.
from foundation to finish. Residents choose their own toppings. Siamese twins
joined in the middle, the villas had flat roofs and beige stucco walls the
texture of which I would pick at until my bitten fingernails bled. All the
external wood was varnished a dark mahogany, the heat making its lacquer peel.
I picked at this too, pulling away large flakes to expose the wood’s untreated
surface. The palette of the compound was neutral, the finish was new, unused,
unweathered. The past happened to other places. Unforgiving materials reassured
us of this: marble stairs and tiled balconies; surfaces hostile to young wet
feet. My knees are still a cross hatch of fine silver scars.
In
the compound we lived a mirrored wonderland of synthetic minimalism. Authentic
space was an alien concept, the differences between residents were leveled by
the architectural harmony of our community. We did not own the things in our
homes, little had sentimental value. The company provided everyone with the
same, from the breeze blocks in the walls to the furniture in our rooms. I was
brained by my Dad for scratching my name with a drawing pin into the bedside
lampshade; these things weren’t ours to claim and where you lived wasn’t who
you were.
the compound we lived a mirrored wonderland of synthetic minimalism. Authentic
space was an alien concept, the differences between residents were leveled by
the architectural harmony of our community. We did not own the things in our
homes, little had sentimental value. The company provided everyone with the
same, from the breeze blocks in the walls to the furniture in our rooms. I was
brained by my Dad for scratching my name with a drawing pin into the bedside
lampshade; these things weren’t ours to claim and where you lived wasn’t who
you were.
The hot air outside was full of dust but the
house we lived in was always clean. My mum, who was a nurse, had her own
preoccupation with death. Dust irritated her allergies so she worked hard to
make sure our house didn’t have any. Mum was also preoccupied with the
cigarettes smoked by Tony and Teresa (our homebrew drinking fun time neighbors)
which she swore we passively inhaled through the inches of concrete that was
our common wall.
house we lived in was always clean. My mum, who was a nurse, had her own
preoccupation with death. Dust irritated her allergies so she worked hard to
make sure our house didn’t have any. Mum was also preoccupied with the
cigarettes smoked by Tony and Teresa (our homebrew drinking fun time neighbors)
which she swore we passively inhaled through the inches of concrete that was
our common wall.
It hailed once and the sky produced frozen
stones as big as gobstoppers. They shot down fast filling the shallow gutters
quickly, driving piles up our front steps, pushing at the edges of our door.
One summer there was a swarm of locust. My sister and I crunched them dead,
green guts spilling, as we walked to the school bus. Mangled bodies covered the
ground in excess. The sky lost focus vibrating grey, they hit against our
cheeks and our ears filled with their piercing song. In the playground that day
as the temperature rose to thirty and with inches of dead locust under our
feet, we said a prayer for a class of children in Dunblane.
stones as big as gobstoppers. They shot down fast filling the shallow gutters
quickly, driving piles up our front steps, pushing at the edges of our door.
One summer there was a swarm of locust. My sister and I crunched them dead,
green guts spilling, as we walked to the school bus. Mangled bodies covered the
ground in excess. The sky lost focus vibrating grey, they hit against our
cheeks and our ears filled with their piercing song. In the playground that day
as the temperature rose to thirty and with inches of dead locust under our
feet, we said a prayer for a class of children in Dunblane.
My fear of bedtime had started before I lived
on the compound but it escalated after we moved there. The wall made my borders
more palpable, what was inside and what was out, what belonged and what did
not. I never wanted to be awake when my parents ‘shut the house down’ and I
often got out of bed to sleep in my sister’s room. The night time was too quiet
and too still; alone in the dark I would imagine all the different ways it was
possible to die. Mostly I feared what I couldn’t see but thought must be there:
a stranger in the night.
on the compound but it escalated after we moved there. The wall made my borders
more palpable, what was inside and what was out, what belonged and what did
not. I never wanted to be awake when my parents ‘shut the house down’ and I
often got out of bed to sleep in my sister’s room. The night time was too quiet
and too still; alone in the dark I would imagine all the different ways it was
possible to die. Mostly I feared what I couldn’t see but thought must be there:
a stranger in the night.
My young fears grew from stories of ambiguous
men: the Incredible Hulk, Frankenstein and Edward Scissorhands. These were not
straightforward killers but tormented souls stricken by bodily difference. I
couldn’t forget the sight of Banner’s shirt shredding across his green mutating
muscles, or the slicing digits of Edward’s hunched figure waiting alone.
men: the Incredible Hulk, Frankenstein and Edward Scissorhands. These were not
straightforward killers but tormented souls stricken by bodily difference. I
couldn’t forget the sight of Banner’s shirt shredding across his green mutating
muscles, or the slicing digits of Edward’s hunched figure waiting alone.
It
wasn’t just the terrors you could wake up to – the stranger in your room or the
monster outside your window – I was anxious about the atmosphere. In bed your
body was prone; vulnerable to asphyxiation by carbon monoxide or smoke from a
fire.
wasn’t just the terrors you could wake up to – the stranger in your room or the
monster outside your window – I was anxious about the atmosphere. In bed your
body was prone; vulnerable to asphyxiation by carbon monoxide or smoke from a
fire.
How
well I slept would depend upon whether I had completed the routine correctly.
Had I tapped my hands 100 times under the running bathroom tap? Had my parents
said ‘goodnight, god bless, see you tomorrow’ in the right order? A fearless
sleep would depend upon whether I had checked the smoke alarm was working or
the front door was locked or what I had read that day. Even now, I sleep with
scissors under my pillow (in previous years a hammer) and the front door keys
by my bed.
well I slept would depend upon whether I had completed the routine correctly.
Had I tapped my hands 100 times under the running bathroom tap? Had my parents
said ‘goodnight, god bless, see you tomorrow’ in the right order? A fearless
sleep would depend upon whether I had checked the smoke alarm was working or
the front door was locked or what I had read that day. Even now, I sleep with
scissors under my pillow (in previous years a hammer) and the front door keys
by my bed.
No one cares about where you are from.
What I am trying to say is that order was
everywhere and still I imagined chaos. What I am trying to say is that the wall
was no use; it didn’t stop the hail or the locust and it didn’t stop my fear of
the stranger in the night.
everywhere and still I imagined chaos. What I am trying to say is that the wall
was no use; it didn’t stop the hail or the locust and it didn’t stop my fear of
the stranger in the night.
What I am trying to do is read the connections
between how we live and what we feel. What will you forget? When people ask
what it was like to live on a compound, the first thing I say is that it wasn’t
real. Then I quote Zygmunt Bauman: ‘order and chaos are modern twins’.
between how we live and what we feel. What will you forget? When people ask
what it was like to live on a compound, the first thing I say is that it wasn’t
real. Then I quote Zygmunt Bauman: ‘order and chaos are modern twins’.
Text by Naomi Pearce.
Naomi Pearce is a writer, producer and
co-founder of the Woodmill. Forthcoming projects include 56 Artillery Lane, a
group exhibition co-curated with Amy Budd opening at Raven Row in April 2017.
She is co-editor of A-OR-IST journal and a current PhD candidate in Art at the
University of Edinburgh.
co-founder of the Woodmill. Forthcoming projects include 56 Artillery Lane, a
group exhibition co-curated with Amy Budd opening at Raven Row in April 2017.
She is co-editor of A-OR-IST journal and a current PhD candidate in Art at the
University of Edinburgh.
Rob Chavasse (1984, UK), lives and works in
London. Selected solo exhibitions include: Holy motors, Hong Kong (2016),
Jupiter Woods, Vienna (2016); Interstate Projects, New York (2016); Sunday
Painter, London (2015); The Royal Standard, Liverpool (2014). Chavasse is
represented by Sunday Painter, London.
London. Selected solo exhibitions include: Holy motors, Hong Kong (2016),
Jupiter Woods, Vienna (2016); Interstate Projects, New York (2016); Sunday
Painter, London (2015); The Royal Standard, Liverpool (2014). Chavasse is
represented by Sunday Painter, London.
Supported
by Creative Scotland, Hope Scott Trust, Glasgow Life
by Creative Scotland, Hope Scott Trust, Glasgow Life