Eleanor ANTIN: Romans & Kings

22 September - 26 October 2017 London
Overview

Richard Saltoun Gallery proudly presents Eleanor ANTIN: Romans & Kings, the first exhibition in London of the pioneering American Feminist filmmaker, performance and conceptual artist. 

 

A key figure of conceptual art movements of the 1970s, Eleanor Antin's ground-breaking practice spans five decades and has covered themes surrounding identity, gender, autobiography, class and social structures. Antin’s multi-disciplinary approach includes installation, painting, drawing, writing and most notably photography and performance. Rearticulating historical narratives, both real and fictitious, she explores the tropes of feminist and conceptual art. Today, as an octogenarian artist, she remains one of the world’s leading Feminist artists.

 

Her debut exhibition at at the gallery consists of recent and historical works from two of Antin’s most iconic bodies of work, including Helen’s Odyssey (2007) and The Last Days of Pompeii (2002).

Works
Installation Views
Press release

Richard Saltoun Gallery proudly presents Eleanor Antin: Romans & Kings, the first exhibition in London of the pioneering American Feminist filmmaker, performance and conceptual artist. 

 

A key figure of conceptual art movements of the 1970s, Eleanor Antin’s ground-breaking practice spans five decades and has covered themes surrounding identity, gender, autobiography, class and social structures. Antin’s multi-disciplinary approach includes installation, painting, drawing, writing and most notably photography and performance. Rearticulating historical narratives, both real and fictitious, she explores the tropes of feminist and conceptual art. Today, as an octogenarian artist, she remains one of the world’s leading Feminist artists.

 

Her debut exhibition at at the gallery consists of recent and historical works from two of Antin’s most iconic bodies of work, including Helen’s Odyssey (2007) and The Last Days of Pompeii (2002). Both works take as their inspiration key allegorical moments in Greek or Roman mythology. Actors, dressed in character costumes pose in front of theatre backdrops and stunning natural landscapes: gladiators pose in mid-battle; an artist studies his muse in the studio; and Paris auditions for his Helen of Troy. These hyper-real tableaux vivants are transformed by modern dress and unfamiliar objects – a maid with a vacuum cleaner is present at the Judgement of Paris – bringing a twist to these familiar scenes.

 

In the monumental Constructing Helen from “Helen’s Odyssey (2007), Antin presents her version of the legendary figure of Helen of Troy, known to be the most beautiful woman in Greek mythology. Helen is a giant clay sculpture, unconsciously waiting to be completed by caricature male artists. A typical reclining nude, she waits to be awoken into an artwork, an action determined only by the men crafting her.

 

In A Hot Afternoon from “The Last Days of Pompeii (2002) two barely clothed Greco-Roman wrestlers take the centre podium, intertwined in a battle at the benefit of on looking women. Antin’s wrestlers resemble a Greek third century sculpture, though they are tanned, oiled and their loincloths made from gold Lamé fabric. Here, ancient allegory travels through time to become a satirical Post-modern scene, where women occupy the gaze and men are the subject.

 

Antin’s seminal series The King of Solana Beach (1972) makes up the third element of the exhibition. Dressed in drag as a cloaked, bearded male, and much to the bemusement of the local civilians, Antin poses as the sovereign of Solana Beach (a coastal city in San Diego, known for its surfing culture). The King, petite in stature, parades the streets, surveying the land and offering counsel to local community members. Behind his grandiose guise, however, he is vulnerable; fighting a losing battle to maintain the rights to the land, which is inevitably being sold to redevelopers.

 

The exhibition coincides with the gallery's presentation at Frieze Masters: Spotlight 2017 (Booth G12), where it presents a solo both with one of Antin's most important works 100 Boots (1971). An epic visual story presented in the form of 51 postcards, this work captured the zeitgeist of 1970s America and re-defined the format of art. Antin photographed 100 black rubber (Wellington) boots in different scenarios which she printed as 51 black and white postcard images and posted to over 1,000 people, including artists, curators and critics. By doing so, she defied traditional methods of exhibition and instead combined the production and presentation of her work so that it would navigate the art world via mail, and reach a larger, more diverse audience. The boots, personified, collectively travel to eventually settle in New York. Reflecting their narrative, in 1975, the 100 Boots exhibition debuted at The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), NY. This is the first time in London that rare vintage prints from this series will be presented alongside a full set of original postcards