SUSAN COLLIS: SWEAT
Substance Misuse III, 2006, Biro on paper
On Vacation, 2008, Biro inks and pencil on paper
For SWEAT, Susan Collis' second solo exhibition at SEVENTEEN, the intense labour underpinning much of her detailed practice is laid bare before the viewer. In addition, a playful yet considered engagement with two distinct modes of production - the industrial and the hand made - runs throughout the exhibition.
The space will be dominated by the bustle of ongoing productivity, a team of workers sitting at tables produce what appear to be laundry bags, the type of which you find at markets and thrift stores around the world. However, divorced from the type of rapid process that would ordinarily mark the production of such a ubiquitous commercial object, the workers instead pour intensely over sheets of Fabriano paper. With delicate precision, using only pencils and biro pens, they slowly mark out the bag pattern upon the surface of the paper. When fully patterned, the paper will be cut and assembled by the workers in order to form an object that straddles the status of both drawing and sculpture while appearing, on first look at least, to be neither. Standing in front of one of these works, it appears to have the perfect semblance of an everyday, nearly disposable item - only upon further detailed examination does the punitive hand made production value of the object become evident.
For SWEAT Collis has constructed a world in which values according to production are realigned and reconsidered. A world in which the smiling benevolent gallerist is transformed into factory foreman via a portrait commissioned by the artist and which hangs directly over the workers as they go about there good work... A world in which a mundane digital clock that governs the flow of the working day and orders the operations of the workers inside the gallery space is in fact a video composed of individual drawings laboriously unified into a single via stop-frame animation. Indeed, a world in which, with the construction of a pseudo industrial scene of productivity, the idea of artist as virtuoso producer of rarefied objects is rallied against in favour of a more open-ended exploration of artistic praxis.
Collis draws attention to the systems employed to produce her work, so much so that production - it's conditions and multivalent modes - becomes the work itself. Crucially, this renders the object nothing other than the necessary documentation of a greater performance, a performance of on-going creation undertaken by the artist and which, momentarily at least, transcends the idea of the finished work or final object.
PV Thursday 11th September.
http://www.seventeengallery.com/index.php?p=3&id=32&iid=0