WILLIAM MACKRELL
Equivalents
At best, daily life, like art, is revolutionary. At worst it is a prison-house. At worst, reflection, like criticism, is reactionary. At best it creates plans for escape.
Paul Willis, Learning to Labor, 1977 Columbia University Press, New York, p194Openings always set the tone. As you would anticipate, this opening features the presence of the artist. But he is not there for the idle chat and ritual courtship from collectors or curators. He is quite tied up with his work Reach. He is scrawling with a crayon directly on to the wall but the just as compelling aspect to notice is taking place at the bottom right of your living picture. The medium states ‘crayon and cable tie.’ William’s left ankle is shackled. The artist’s mark-making benefits from the restriction - he is drawing restrained. It gives him a degree of balance and sets a limitation to his reach. The red crayola makes it more bodily than charcoal or graphite would. Red resembles lipstick marks - a profondo rosso, fatal attraction to the art. It is as if Richard Serra was in touch with his feminine side, was mildly self-harming (rather than prone to crushing others) and was a little bit taller. There are a couple of horses attached to a 2CV outside but I will return to that later.
William Mackrell is fascinated by the sublime and the absurd in art and the everyday. Each work is an experiment that he undertakes and the process becomes the content. Routines remembered, repeated and worked through. William is constantly exploring the networks and boundaries in the art world. Art is worked out and developed through trial and error, through connections and conversations. Wisdom, madness and folly in more-or-less (or less is more) equal measure.
I highlight works in anticipation of the Andipa exhibition and reflect on others presented at Dundee Contemporary Arts (DCA) last year when it was my pleasure to work with William.
Graham DomkeExhibitions Curator
Dundee Contemporary Arts
When we sat in your room…
Exposed brings to mind Bruce Nauman’s Mapping the Studio 1 (Fat Chance for John Cage), (2001) but done as a rayograph in place of a multiple camera, 42 night shoot.
Nauman understood and used his studio as an essential element and structure in his artistic work, casting himself as the physical (artist) agent. This important installation from the year 2001 shows his empty studio – i.e. the basic pre-conditions for artistic production – pure absence as the presence of the self.
Kasper König, Mapping the Studio 1 (Fat Chance John Cage), 2003 Museum Ludwig, Köln, p7
You’ve got to watch light at work. It’s light that creates. I sit down in front of my photographic paper and I think.
Man Ray to Jean Gallotti, La photographie est-elle un art?, 1929 L’Art vivant, 103, 1/4/1929, p282
Exposed 2013 Rayograph Etching 239 cm x 151 cmLast night I dreamt…
Mackrell’s Sleep is not to be confused with (but inevitably ends up in bed with) Andy Warhol’s 1963 film of Taylor Mead. A frustration at the practical impossibility to create whilst asleep is overcome and shown within a keep-you-awake light box on tells-thetruth Carbon paper. What you think would be inaction (especially if you have watched Warhol’s Sleep) is a bona-fide action painting, as restless as Mackrell’s constantly shifting practice. It is completely un-self-conscious, made whilst unconscious, primitive mark-making with a formalist strategy (complete with a formalist grid of the joined-together paper).
Sleep 2013 Action on Carbon paper 200 cm x 140 cmI ended up with sore lips...
With Lip Sync, Mackrell in black lipstick reads a statement and drags his lips across a piece of white paper. The blackness fades to grey as the lipstick wears off. The lipstick gets reapplied and he can start again, like coming up for air or the end of a sentence. Here the lipstick resembles charcoal, is less emotive somehow than the red crayon in Reach but is uncharacteristically EMO. An association to Bruce Nauman returns in his Art Make-Up (1967) but with added layers courtesy of Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard’s Kiss My Nauman (2007) where a Kiss tribute act become four equivalents to Nauman. The resulting work on paper nonetheless only partially tells this story. The less you know sometimes, the better it is for all concerned.
Lip Sync 2013 Lipstick on paper 90 cm x 60 cmI left the North, I travelled South… I left the South, I travelled North…
The North South divide gets settled by a shouting match. Cues: Hair length, facial hair, level of buttoning going on with the shirt. Check shirt. More confrontational eye contact, check.
Never seen a keener midfielder…
A squad of friends attempted to play a football match with a concrete ball for 90 Minutes. The work is inspired by Saddam Hussein’s son Uday, who was reported to have inflicted this punishment on the Iraqi football team for failing to reach the 1994 World Cup Finals. At the opening of his exhibition at DCA, the game Gallery Assistants wore the strips.
There is a light…
1000 Candles is a full circle of tea light candles: at DCA, Mackrell showed them first unlit (potential), then lit (as performative object) and then left as a remnant. He also showed them as a document in photographic and video form.
‘I was working with a torch that had the power of one thousand candles, and the idea was to light one thousand tea lights in a circle on the floor. It was virtually impossible to light all of them because one candle would starve another of its oxygen and because of the heat, I couldn’t lean over to light them all.’
William Mackrell, in conversation with Isabel Vasseur and Simon Linington, 2012 Simon Linington & William Mackrell: Take Two, 2012, self published, London, p46
That when he goes, He really goes…
In the end we have Deux Chevaux. Two horses (deux chevaux) pull a car of the same horsepower through the countryside until they become tired or bored. For Andipa they are stationary outside the gallery – his potential means of escape. If he can extricate himself from Reach he can make his getaway. Going to the gallery is a performance. Outside the gallery is a performance. Inside the gallery is a performance. The only performance that makes it, that makes it all the way, is the one that achieves madness. Turner (Mick Jagger), Donald Cammell, writer/co-director, Performance, 1970
BIOGRAPHY
B.1983 Lives and works in London
Education
2005 BA (Hons) Fine Art Chelsea College of Art and Design, University of the Arts London
2004 Erasmus Exchange Program, Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts, Budapest
Awards
2013 Spotlight Prize, Andipa Gallery & Royal British Society of Sculptors, London
2012 Emerging Artist Bursary Award, Royal British Society of Sculptors, London
Residencies
2013 Krinzinger Projeckte, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna
Selected Solo Exhibitions
2013 Lullaby, Andipa Gallery, London
2012 FLOOR, Museum of Contemporary Art, London
Take Two, Arts Gallery, London
Selected Group Exhibitions
2013 Why Painting, Krinzinger Projeckte, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna
OVERT Exchange, APT Gallery, London
2012 Bursary Awards 2012, Royal British Society of Sculptors, London
Joint Ventures, Space in Between, London
I HEART 3D, Christie’s, London
Infinite Jest, Dundee Contemporary Arts, Scotland
Oriel Davies Open, Oriel Davies Gallery, Newtown, Wales
Drawing on Ideas, Royal British Society of Sculptors, London
DIFC Art Night, Cuadro Gallery, Dubai
2011 Over and over and over! Space in Between at Sluice Art Fair, London
Works in Video, Space in Between, London
The First Cut, RMIT Project Space, RMIT, Melbourne
The Explorers, Standpoint Gallery, London
Colour LIGHT Time, Nellie Castan Gallery, Melbourne
2010 Innovators 3, Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts, Melbourne
Colour LIGHT Time, Two Rooms Gallery, Auckland
Where Beats This Human Heart, Space In Between, London
The Middle of Nowhere: Objects and Actions in the Abyss, Departure Gallery, London
Published to coincide with the exhibition:
Lullaby
William Mackrell
Andipa Contemporary, London 30.09.13-12.10.13
Printed in an edition of 300
ISBN 978 0 9568292 1 4
Text © Graham Domke
With thanks to:
Acoris Andipa
Andipa Gallery
Royal British Society of Sculptors
Graham Domke
Dundee Contemporary Arts
Angela de la Cruz
Rachel & Gregory Barker
Lloyd Anthony Barker
Darren Lucraft
Agnese Sanvito