MK Gallery
20 April–17 June 2012
900 Midsummer Boulevard
Milton Keynes, MK9 3QA
+44 (0) 1908 676 900
www.mkgallery.org
MK Gallery presents Rise Early, Be Industrious, the first
survey exhibition by British artist Olivia Plender, co-produced with
Arnolfini, Bristol and Centre for Contemporary Arts, Glasgow.
Characterised as a ‘museum of communication’, four room-sized
installations trace a line between a selection of Plender’s past
projects, focussing on historical and contemporary forms of
communication and education. Plender’s research-based practice explores
numerous educational models, including educational games, world fairs,
television and the internet, looking at how attitudes towards education
have evolved over time. She also questions how official historical
narratives are constructed, looking at the hierarchies behind the ‘voice
of authority’ that is traditionally produced by educational
institutions within the public sphere, such as the museum, the academy,
the national library and the media.
The room installation Words and Laws (Whose shoulder to which wheel?) revolves
around games, architecture and politics. This includes several toys
encouraging public participation, such as the board game Set Sail for the Levant
(based on a sixteenth century original) and an architectural toy (based
on a nineteenth century model developed by German educational reformer
Friedrich Froebel) inviting visitors to assemble civic buildings from
wooden blocks. It also presents Plender’s recent publishing projects, a
newly commissioned hanging mobile and various allegorical and satirical
objects, including a wicker beehive (symbolic in the Victorian period of
the perfect industrious society) and a Stockholm Duck House (a replica
of a duck house which became the media’s symbol for the British MPs’
expenses scandal in 2009).
...
MK Gallery’s Foyer is transformed into an Entrepreneurial Garden
that imitates a Google style working environment with relaxed seating, a
coffee machine, plants, table football and basketball hoops, along with
motivational prints. This installation seeks to explore how
distinctions between work and leisure, public and private have been
collapsed in recent times. By contrasting this recreational atmosphere
with the democratic educational/broadcasting models imagined by
politically radical social movements in the 1960s and 1970s Plender
draws parallels between Google’s stated mission to ‘organise the world’s
information and make it universally accessible and useful’ with the
claims to universality of the national library, or enlightenment museum,
to ask what kind of knowledge and information is privileged by these
different frameworks?
With its strong architectural dimension, involving the construction
of platforms and architectural models and a deliberate emphasis on play
and pedagogical, game-like structures, the exhibition invites visitors
to participate and ‘perform’ while considering how social roles and
models of society have been constructed over the last few hundred years.
Olivia Plender (b.1977) lives
and works in Berlin and has exhibited worldwide. Her research-based
practice varies from graphic novels to performance, video and
installation. Recent solo exhibitions include: Aadieu Adieu Apa (2009), Gasworks, London; Information, Education, Entertainment (2007), Marabouparken, Stockholm and The Folly of Man Exposed or the World Turned Upside Down
(2006) at Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt. Selected group
exhibitions include: Brtish Art Show 7 (2011), Nottingham Contemporary,
Nottingham and Hayward Gallery, London; Newspeak: British Art Now, Saatchi Gallery, London (2011); Taipei Biennial, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taiwan (2010); Altermodern: Tate Triennial, Tate Britain, London, (2009); Art Now Live, (2007) Tate Britain, London (performance) ; Athens Biennial: How to Endure, Athens, Greece (2007); Tate Triennial, Tate Britain, London, (2006); Busan Biennial, Busan, South Korea (2006); BMW – 1X Baltic Triennale of International Art, CAC, Vilnius, Lithuania (2005); Romantic Detachment, PS1/ MoMA, New York, USA (2004).
Exhibition DatesOlivia Plender: Rise Early, Be Industrious,
is an exhibition in three episodes presented at MK Gallery, Milton
Keynes (20 April – 17 June), Arnolfini, Bristol (14 July – 9 September)
and Centre for Contemporary Arts, Glasgow (13 October – 15 December
2012). Evolving over the three galleries, different works will be
included at each venue.