Joao Penalava Photography Exhibition

Simon Lee Gallery, 12 Berkeley Street, London
Joao Penalava Photography Exhibition image
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Event has ended
This event ended on Saturday 25th of April 2015
Admission
Free
Location

Simon Lee Gallery, 12 Berkeley Street, London

Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Green Park 0.10 miles

Simon Lee Gallery is proud to announce a solo exhibition of new work by the London–based Portuguese artist, João Penalva, featuring a series of large scale photographs of London pavements taken at points along the artist’s daily routes between home and studio.

Printed onto linen and mounted on aluminium, like all of Penalva’s photographs these works are historical documents. Records of surfaces laid down over time by the addition or replacement of material and texture, they stand as transcripts of the labour that makes them and of the passage of man and machine across their surface.

While he works across many media, photography is central to Penalva’s practice. Often shown accompanied by narrative text, Penalva’s photograph, slide and film installations suggest themselves as documentary, but jarring notes or a fictional tone offer other potential readings.

Beneath the soil of the contemporary city can be found the memory-traces of its past, but that history is also preserved on the surface of the city’s streets. Shown alongside these large scale images, small format silver gelatine prints are also titled after the places the photographs were taken, mostly in areas of Tokyo. Their title includes as well the name Michio Harada, and for each a date, between 1966 and 1978. A book accompanying the exhibition reproduces these and other works by the Japanese photographer. This is an exhibition within an exhibition, an appropriation or homage, but the precise status of these works — their authorship, the place and date of their making, is unclear.

This ambiguity casts doubt in turn on the status of the street pavement photographs, and continues in the exhibition’s final element, a slide installation entitled Monument shown in the lower gallery. An image of a photographic enlarger is projected alongside a text describing three members of a single family from Northern Ireland, one of whom is supposed to be the photographer. The work suggests an exercise in genealogical reminiscence, but also the weaving of a complex and whimsical story, perhaps fact, perhaps fiction, that crosses generations.

Tags: Exhibition

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