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GRAND DESIGNS In his largest public exhibition to date Matthew Darbyshire draws on the style of Glasgow’s most famous artistic son to transform the main space at Tramway. He shares his vision with Rosalie Doubal
‘I LIKE THESE TYPES OF
The distinctive art nouveau style of artist Charles Rennie Mackintosh has become synonymous with Glasgow. Lauded for his elegant design of the art school, and the organic allure of his decorative works, his influence now reaches well beyond his artistic successors, with gift shop imitations adorning tea towels, stationary and oven gloves. It’s this wholesale co-opting of the Mackintosh-style – or, as Matthew Darbyshire would have it, ‘Mockintosh’ – that has become the London artist’s subject for his upcoming exhibition in the Tramway’s prodigious main gallery space.
Darbyshire shot to acclaim with his object installations that question design’s role in the consensual directives we see shaping our culture. Past works have seen the artist mock-up the complete flat of a fictitious thirty- something professional, with day-glo plastics, a free McDonald’s glass and lifestyle magazines, demarcating the gent’s taste and choices, and in turn representing the forces that influence our consumption. For Darbyshire, modern design holds a mirror to the social and economic state of society. Drawn to Glasgow for its chintzy commitment to the legacy of one of its most famous architects, Darbyshire was also attracted by the ‘macho’ scale of the gallery space. ‘It’s so big that it’s almost like it’s outdoors,’ he exclaims. ‘It’s a bit like going to an arena or a retail avenue, I like these types of shopping mall environments.’ His show in the Tramway, the
Visual Art
REVIEW PHOTOGRAPHY WHAT PRESENCE! – THE ROCK PHOTOGRAPHY OF HARRY PAPADOPOULOS Street Level, Glasgow, until Sat 25 Feb ●●●●●
Harry Papadopoulos is the great unsung documenter of post-punk, who, between 1978 and 1984, captured a crucial era in pop history in all its geeky glory. Having started out taking snaps for fanzine, The Ten Commandments, and orbiting around Postcard Records’ extended family of jangular mavericks who would go on to define themselves as the Sound of Young Scotland, Papadopoulos became a staff photographer on music paper Sounds. Where contemporaries on the NME such as Anton Corbijn have been rightly lionised for their work, Papadopoulos’ canon has been all but airbrushed from history. So the significance of this major excavation of a huge body of work cannot be understated.
With more than 300 images on show, the fertile Scot-pop scene inevitably dominates here. A gangly and giggly Orange Juice-era Edwyn Collins skates on thin ice. A tweedy-looking Aztec Camera chew on pipes like elderly uncles before their time. A demented Davy Henderson of Fire Engines roars into a microphone, his face taut with urgent, sinewy contortions. A fragrant Clare Grogan perches on a park bench looking, well, lovely. Co-curator Ken McCluskey’s band The Bluebells pack into an open- topped sports car.
There’s a wonderfully gawky naturalness to this fabulous archive that pre-dates celebrity culture during a time when politics and pop were inseparable. A striking portrait of Gil Scott-Heron is set next to one of Tom Robinson, Bronski Beat’s Jimmy Somerville and future Erasure vocalist Andy Bell lining up for a gay rights march. The Clash are captured in full barricade-manning flight. With a series of events to accompany the show, What Presence! is an unmissable history lesson from a major artist. (Neil Cooper)
artist’s largest to date, will comprise film, sculpture and printmaking. Often incorporating collaborations within his work, Darbyshire’s installation also houses smaller projects made with artists Rupert Ackroyd, Jacob Farrell, Owen Hatherley and Scott King. Presenting a series of trompe l’oeil facades, Darbyshire will fill the space with a faux-residential care village riddled with ‘mockintosh’ influence. ‘Although each building front will indicate a different use, for example domestic or leisure, they are homogenised by this abject-looking development vernacular, produced with very low-grade shitty budgets, almost like Barratt Homes, but in a simplistic Mackintosh style,’ he explains. ‘It’s quite soulless and bland deliberately, and looks like a digital architecture drawing.’
SHOPPING MALL ENVIRONMENTS’
Far from mocking the work of Mackintosh, Darbyshire’s criticisms are levelled at the use of artists’ motifs in private and public spaces to sell lifestyles, whether that be through trainers, iPods or sheltered housing flats. Perhaps what this artist does best is present us with seemingly impartial installations. By bringing signs of the uniform design languages that shape urban processes of regeneration into the Tramway, Darbyshire leaves the space for critique open, while nudging his audience to look again at the design elements of our surrounds. Matthew Darbyshire: T Rooms, Tramway, Glasgow, Fri 27 Jan–Sun 11 Mar.
5 Jan–2 Feb 2012 THE LIST 105