Jac Leirner, 'Junkie', White Cube Mason's Yard, 18 March-14 May 2016
White Cube Mason’s Yard is pleased to present ‘Junkie’, an exhibition by Brazilian artist Jac Leirner. Although the sculptures and photography in this exhibition are new, they have their origins at a point in time around 30 years ago when Leirner began to keep ephemera and objects, some of which are associated with her addiction to drugs. Gathered over several years, the objects used in these new works were assembled and photographed during a cocaine binge over three nights in 2010.
Leirner’s varied work includes sculpture, painting, installation, and works on paper, frequently featuring the residual matter that surrounds us in everyday life, re-presented to create new and unexpected associations. Stickers, turnbuckles, rulers, plastic bags, business cards, cigarette ends and even bank notes make their appearance in her sculptures. They are amassed together to form a visual compendia, removed but not entirely dislocated from their original function.
In this exhibition Leirner continues to explore themes key to her work, including referencing specific moments in art history, particularly Brazilian Modernism. In this new series of photographs, small, surreal sculptures carved from lumps of cocaine, including a beautiful miniature head and a tiny heart are juxtaposed with objects found around the artist’s house, such as dice, razor blades and tweezers. Printed onto strips of plywood, the images are laid out in a line, mnemonically, and presented horizontally along the wall, creating a series of associations and narratives that chart the passing of time and the haze and energy associated with taking drugs.
Shown alongside the photographs are a new series of wall-based sculptures that bring together items collected during Leirner’s past years of addiction. Colourful cigarette papers and cigarette boxes are mounted onto plywood supports incorporating the bubble section of a sprit level into their compositions. The whole ensemble seems to present a sense of connection and equilibrium that drugs might promise to an addict or, equally, art might bring to the viewer. However, they remain simply the evidence from everyday life, extracted, arranged and composed in the most visual and straightforward manner.
In the ground floor gallery, a group of suspended sculptures incorporate the butts and filters from used cigarettes and joints, strung onto steel cables and stretched across the exhibition space. As with the artist’s earlier cigarette sculptures, when lined up together this colourful detritus takes on a subtle, almost celebratory beauty. Dramatic and elegant, these works document a compulsive habit as well as visualising notions of dependency, like umbilical threads that connect artist or consumer with the material source of addiction through their celebration of art and beauty.
Leirner will also produce an artist’s book to coincide with the exhibition, documenting the entire series of photographs across 600 pages, designed by the award-winning Dutch graphic designer Irma Boom.
Jac Leirner was born in São Paulo, 1961, where she lives and works. She graduated in visual arts from Fundação Armando Álvares Penteado – FAAP, São Paulo. In 1983 and 1989, Leirner participated in the Bienal de São Paulo and in the Aperto at the 44th Venice Biennale in 1990. In 1991, she had a residency and exhibition at Walker Art Center, Minneapolis and Museum of Modern Art, Oxford. She participated in dOCUMENTA (IX), Kassel (1992) and represented Brazil at the 47th Venice Biennale (1997). Further solo exhibitions include Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderna, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (2014) and Museo Tamayo, Mexico (2014); Yale School of Art, New Haven (2012); Centre d’Art de Saint Nazaire, France and the Estação Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo (2011); Miami Art Museum (2004); Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo (1999); Centre d’Art Contemporain Geneva (1993).
Jac Leirner
Junkie
18 March-14 May 2016
Preview: 17 March 2016, 6-8pm
Admission to White Cube is free.
White Cube Mason’s Yard is open Tuesday–Saturday 10am– 6pm.
25–26 Mason’s Yard St. James’s London SW1Y 6BU United Kingdom +44 (0)20 7930 5373.