Ruin Lust will offer a guide to the mournful, thrilling, comic
and perverse uses of ruins in art from the seventeenth century to the present
day, at Tate Britain from 4 March 2014. The exhibition is the widest ranging on
the subject of ruins in art to date and includes over 100 works by artists such
as J.M.W. Turner, John Constable, John Martin, Eduardo Paolozzi, Rachel
Whiteread and Tacita Dean.
The exhibition begins with the eighteenth century craze for
ruins that overtook artists, writers and architects. J.M.W. Turner and John
Constable were among those who toured Britain in search of ruins and
picturesque landscapes, producing works such as
Turner’s Tintern Abbey: The Crossing and Chancel, Looking towards the East Window, 1794,
and Constable’s Sketch for ‘Hadleigh Castle’ c.1828–9.
Turner’s Tintern Abbey: The Crossing and Chancel, Looking towards the East Window, 1794,
and Constable’s Sketch for ‘Hadleigh Castle’ c.1828–9.
Britain’s ruinous heritage has been revisited and sometimes
mocked by later artists. Keith Arnatt photographed the juxtaposition of
historic and modern elements at picturesque sites for his deadpan series
A.O.N.B.(Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty) 1982–4. John Latham’s sculpture
Five Sisters Bing 1976 was part of a project to turn post-industrial shale
heaps in Scotland into monuments. Classical ruins have a continued presence in
the work of Eduardo Paolozzi, Ian Hamilton Finlay and John Stezaker. In Rachel
Whiteread’s Demolished – B: Clapton Park Estate 1996, which shows the
demolition of Hackney tower blocks, we see Modernist architectural dreams
destroyed.
The exhibition explores ruination through both slow picturesque
decay and abrupt apocalypse.
John Martin’s The Destruction of Pompei and Herculaneum 1822
recreates historical disaster
while Gustave Doré’s engraving The New Zealander 1872
shows a ruined London.
The cracked dome of St. Paul’s Cathedral in the distance of this nineteenth century work was a scene partly realised during the Blitz.
John Martin’s The Destruction of Pompei and Herculaneum 1822
recreates historical disaster
while Gustave Doré’s engraving The New Zealander 1872
shows a ruined London.
The cracked dome of St. Paul’s Cathedral in the distance of this nineteenth century work was a scene partly realised during the Blitz.
Ruin Lust also investigates work provoked by the wars of the
twentieth century. Graham Sutherland’s Devastation series 1940–1, depicts the
aftermath of the Blitz while Jane and Louise Wilson’s 2006 photographs show the
Nazis’ defensive Atlantic Wall along the north coast of France. Paul Nash’s
photographs of surreal architectural fragments in the 1930s and 40s, or Jon
Savage’s images of a desolate London in the late 1970s show how artists also
view ruins as zones of pure potential, where the world must be rebuilt or
reimagined.
The exhibition includes rooms devoted to Tacita Dean and Gerard
Byrne. Dean’s film installation Kodak 2006 explores the ruin of the image, as
the technology of 16mm film faces obsolescence. In 1984 and Beyond 2005–7,
Byrne reimagines a future that might have been. The installation presents a
re-enactment of a discussion, published in Playboy in 1963, in which science
fiction writers – including Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury and Arthur C. Clarke –
speculate about what the world might be like in 1984.
This transhistorical exhibition is curated by writer and critic
Brian Dillon; Emma Chambers, Curator of Modern British Art; and Amy Concannon,
Assistant Curator of British Art, 1790–1850.
It is accompanied by a bookand a program of talks and events in the gallery.
Nice review
It is accompanied by a bookand a program of talks and events in the gallery.
Nice review