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JOHN
ISAACS
THE CLOSEST I
EVER CAME TO YOU.
18 Nov 2011 - 21 Jan
2012
opening Thursday 17th
Nov at 6 pm
To do to you again
what was done before
2008
silicone reproduction
elephant foot, car body filler, acrylic paint,
vinyl,
42 x 42 x 104
cm
Edition of 3 + 2
AP
While producing these
new works I was trying to bring together many of the themes,
materials, and issues which have been running through my work
for the last years.
Primarily the works
'en masse' deal with our place as individuals within society,
with the sometimes disempowering aspect of our contemporary
overload, and the romantic fading memory of a simplified world
view in which one’s sense of place was denoted by boundaries
of personal vision and physicality, a memory which is now
transformed into an endless web of connections and
information, most of which, though highly omnipresent and
totally accessible, leaves us as spectators rather than
participators in what we are able to know.
Give birth to your
own gods and bury your own demons
2011
wax, plaster, wood,
oil paint, straw, plastic
234 x 100 x 100
cm
That our 'western'
society is in some form of decline, that economic pressures
are forcing - once taken for granted - ways of life into
recession and generations to follow will be confronted with
the implications of our present collective inability to act as
a whole, are nothing new. What I hope to find and provide with
my work is a framework in which we can open up from the closed
and specific nature of boundaries of race, gender and religion
to achieve what the foundations of all dreams of progress have
put within our grasp and yet left us ignorant of how to
utilize; namely that the combined nature of history and our
contemporary levels of information enables us to see beyond
our personal borders.
That we are now able
to transcend our indigenous culture and collectively arrive at
a combined view, a consensus is closer than ever before,
though of course our inhibitive nature and reliance on
technology makes us impotent. The contemporary tension arises
between this impotence to change our way of life, our every
day guilt ridden complicity, and the very real and near
horizon in which we see our catastrophic end. Collectively the
human race is like rabbit in the headlights of an oncoming
vehicle, the difference is however, that unlike the rabbit, we
are informed of it's danger and taught how to cross the road,
our real difficulty becomes clearer when we realize that WE
constructed this vehicle ourselves, we are driving this
vehicle ourselves, and should we stop it then all hell would
break lose, and yet it is heading straight for us, with us
behind the wheel.
Every one is
making do with what they have but looking at you makes me want
less
2010
glazed ceramic,
steel
75 x 10 x 120
cm
The closest I ever
came to you' is the umbrella with which to stroll through this
exhibition. Meant as a way into these disparate works which
deal with themes of doubt, belief, love and hope, which was
both ambiguous and specific, 'the closest I ever came to you',
reflects both a highly personal position and yet could
encompass humanity in it's entirety. A gold plated megaphone,
a chunk of rusted monument, an ethnic sculpture with guts
spilling from it, a chariot powered by a child’s bicycle, all
reflect our dreams and utopias held within the time of their
conception and the time of their demise.
If you wait
another day I will wait another day
2011
Car door neon -
chevrolet impala car door, neon
245 x 170
cm
I have for a long time
been interested in these relative states of evolution, that
nothing is in the end parallel, yet what is surprising is that
our societies still believe that all of us should be the same,
can be the same. It is this educationally entrenched ignorance
and arrogance, that has run through human history and shaped
our conflicts, shaped our preconceptions of the 'other', not
only as we greet them, but as we colonized them. As the
colonizer came to know the other as exotic and forced one
dominant view, one way of life, onto the other more fragile
and unable to resist, so this model is perverted and
reproduced in the mechanisms of commerce. The shocking truth
is that after all the leaps of political correctness we are
still unable to accept that difference is actually the key to
understanding one another; that we can indeed embrace all
without judgment or guilt and move forward together enjoying
and relishing in our shadows and forms that move and sleep to
the same rhythm’s whatever their beliefs.
This, my third solo
exhibition at Aeroplastics is an open question, not a sermon.
The works stand before you like breathless guilty messengers,
having made such a long voyage through time to your door that
they have long forgotten the original ‘message’ and rely
solely on your hospitality, on your intelligence and ability
to give the time to interpret the look in their
faces.
John
Isaacs
November
2011
What is it that
there is something and nothing
2011
c-print on
aluminium
141 x 101 cm
(unframed)
AEROPLASTICS
contemporary
director : Jerome
Jacobs
32 r. Blanche
str.
1060
Brussels
Belgium
T + 32 2 537 22
02
F +32 2 537 15
49
opening
hours Tuesday - Friday 11.00 - 18.00 + Saturday
14.00-18.00 or by appointment - closed on Bank
Holidays
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