Exhibition
05.02.10 - 27.02.10
Main Gallery
Jesse Jones
Mahogany
Jesse Jones is a highly acclaimed young Irish artist, whose work is rapidly
becoming more well known across Europe. Jones’s practice focuses on the
embedded political and social histories that are present within everyday
life.
She is interested in the moments when this hidden history comes to the
surface, such as the demonstration or strike, and in moments of convergence. Seeing popular culture as an expression of this collective narrative of history, her work often adopts elements such as the B movie or pop music as a site of shared memory.
Jones' most recent work Mahogany premiered at the Istanbul Biennial in 2009 and was filmed during Jones' residency at Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces. With this film Jones became interested in the idea of a ‘Paradise City’, or aspired for utopia. Bertolt Brecht’s 1927 play "The Rise
and Fall of the City of Mahogany” epitomises this notion, drawing on ideas of political ideologies and their spectral residues within history. Described by The Guardian UK as “a masterful rejigging of Bertolt Brecht’s
bitter fable about the fall of a city dedicated to pleasure…” Mahogany is an
important contribution to discussions of alienation in the face of utopian
aspirations.
Using Brecht’s mode of distanciation, Mahogany is presented as a non-place that can be read as a critique of present political conditions. Mahogany - in both the play and the film, is a town embedded with metaphorical
associations to ideas of post utopia. It questions ideas of convergence and
the systemic injustices inherent in capitalism as well as the possibilities of its collapse. |