David Birkin and Jeremy Hutchison “Some Fifty Miles of Concrete Pavement”

(Art) Amalgamated

poster for David Birkin and Jeremy Hutchison “Some Fifty Miles of Concrete Pavement”

This event has ended.

On a day in April, Birkin walks 25 miles northeast across the Mojave Desert. At the same time, Hutchison leaves his studio in east London and walks 25 miles southwest. They fail to meet in the middle.

Some Fifty Miles of Concrete Pavement is a collaboration between David Birkin and Jeremy Hutchison. For the period of this project, the two artists worked in geographical isolation: one in the US, the other in the UK. Through sculpture, video, sound, text and photography, the exhibition documents the complications of this virtual exchange, and their repeated efforts to meet — both physically and ideologically — and to bridge the ocean between them.

Starting with Eisenhower’s 1953 speech The Chance for Peace* the collaborators soon veered off course, wandering through conversational territories in their effort to find common ground. As such, this new body of work is an attempt at correspondence. It is a monument to the mismatched: a study of conflict from conflicting perspectives, and an exercise in equivalence. It is about proximity and scale, land art and Skype. And it’s about friendship.

Jeremy Hutchison (b. 1979) graduated from the Slade School of Fine Art. Having trained in linguistics and written advertising for Coca-Cola, his work plunges a disruptive logic into the smooth mechanisms of industrial production and consumer ideology. In a recent exhibition, Hutchison transformed Paradise Row gallery into the boutique of ERRATUM®, a dysfunctional luxury brand. His work has exhibited internationally, including shows at Saatchi New Sensations, V&A Museum, Zabludowicz Collection, Liste, Grand Union, Z33, Nassauischer Kunstverein Wiesbaden, and a commission for the Southbank Centre. Earlier this year, he returned from a residency with Delfina Foundation. This will culminate in a show at London’s ICA in June.

David Birkin (b. 1977) studied anthropology at Oxford and fine art at the Slade. His work foregrounds the failures of photography as a way of reflecting on loss, focusing on depictions of war and points at which the personal and political collide. Birkin was an artist in residence on VLA’s Art & Law program in NY and recently completed a film funded by the Arts Council, England. He was the recipient of the Sovereign Art Prize (Barbican, London), Celeste Art Prize (Museo Centrale Montemartini, Rome) and a National Media Museum bursary, and has exhibited at the Courtauld Institute, Photographers’ Gallery, Saatchi New Sensations, Solyanaka State Gallery, Moscow, and Tallinn Kunstihoone, Estonia. He is currently on a fellowship at the NARS Foundation in Brooklyn.

Media

Schedule

from May 07, 2013 to July 13, 2013

Opening Reception on 2013-05-07 from 18:00 to 20:00

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