Press release:
Carey Young: Appearance
Solo exhibition, Modern Art Oxford, March 25 to July 2nd 2023
Oxford UK: Modern Art Oxford announces the largest institutional show in the UK by Carey Young (b. 1970, UK/US national, lives and works in London).
Focusing on the artist’s multi-layered vision of female identity, the exhibition offers timely new perspectives on power, gender and justice. Featuring three major video works, including the ambitious new commission Appearance (2023), as well as related text-based and photographic works, Carey Young: Appearance, runs from 25 March until 2 July 2023.
In the video work Appearance, Young extends her ongoing artistic interest in the law, developed over the past two decades. This wordless, filmic portrait presents fifteen UK female judges - diverse in seniority, age and ethnicity - in their judicial robes looking straight at the camera. With almost forensic close-ups of hair, shoes, jewellery and regalia, the camera plays off the judges’ roles as powerful, self-possessed public intellectuals against their varied physical presence and the quirks of individual personalities. Sitters including Dame Vivien Rose, Justice of the Supreme Court, exhibit a mix of studied neutrality and a complex interiority. Stylistically poised between painting and photography, the piece takes inspiration from Andy Warhol’s Screen Tests, which in itself was inspired by the ‘most wanted’ ads of the New York Police Dept. Whilst countering the familiar patriarchal culture of law, Appearance places the viewer in the dock, and centres on ideas of judgement between viewer and judge, on judging as performance, and on the power relations between judge and camera.
Other notable prior works include the critically-acclaimed Palais de Justice (2017), for which Young surreptitiously filmed courtroom trials at Brussels’ labyrinthine main courthouse over a two-year period. Shooting only female judges and lawyers glimpsed through circular windows in courthouse doors, the piece uses a painterly, hallucinatory aesthetic to evoke a legal system controlled by women. The Vision Machine (2020), here receiving its UK debut, develops the approach and aesthetic of Palais de Justice to a concern with women as skilled technicians and often-overlooked creators. Filmed at the factory of SIGMA Corporation, a renowned brand of lenses for photography and video, the piece reflects on the factory and its processes as a metaphor for photography and mass production, suggesting a female-centric vision, or indeed, perhaps a wider visual culture created by women.
Alongside the videos, a selection of Young’s new and existing text and photographic works feature sites including prisons, legal borders and imaginary space, connecting law, architecture, language and the body. One such work, Obsidian Contract (2010), contains a legal contract written backwards and legible within a black mirror, a device associated with witchcraft. The contract proposes the exhibition space as a new area of publicly-owned land, in which certain activities considered illegal in public space at different times, are made permissible. A new series of photographs of brightly coloured prison architecture detail the surfaces of an apparently optimistic environment, and relate the abstractions of law to abstraction in art, referencing Modernist painting in particular.
Exhibition curator Emma Ridgway said, “Young's compelling and intelligently playful work has substantially expanded in scale and ambition in recent years. Her new videos make a valuable contribution to discussions on gender equality, visual perception and the codifications of power. Her latest video work Appearance is a masterclass in the act of seeing, sensitising us to the delights of looking closely at telling details.”
//ENDS//
Notes for Editors
For media enquiries contact Clare Stimpson, Head of Digital and Communications, media@modernartoxford.org.uk
About Modern Art Oxford
Located in one of the world’s great cities of learning, Modern Art Oxford is a leading contemporary art space with an international reputation for innovative and ambitious programming. We promote creativity in all its visual forms as an agent of social change. Our programmes, both in person and online, are shaped by a belief in dialogue between contemporary art and ideas and celebrate the relevance of contemporary visual culture to society today.
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Modern Art Oxford, 30 Pembroke Street, Oxford, UK, OX1 1BP
About Carey Young
Carey Young gained an MA in Photography from the Royal College of Art in 1997. Using video, photography, text, print, performance and installation, her work explores relations between the body, language, rhetoric, and systems of power. Since 2002, she has developed a large series of works which address and explore law, and which have involved collaborations with lawyers. Young’s work has been exhibited widely, including solo shows at Kunsthal Aarhus, Aarhus, Denmark (2020), La Loge, Brussels (2019), Towner Art Gallery (2019), Dallas Museum of Art (2017), Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich (2013), The Power Plant, Toronto (2009), Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis (2009), Eastside Projects (Birmingham, 2009 & tour) and John Hansard Gallery (Southampton, 2001). Group shows include Centre Pompidou (Paris and Brussels), New Museum (New York), Whitechapel Gallery, Tate Britain, Tate Liverpool, ICA (London), Secession (Vienna) and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, amongst many others. She has participated in numerous biennials, including Busan (2020), Moscow (2013, 2007), Taipei (2010), Sharjah (2005), and Venice (2003). She received a Paul Hamlyn Award for Artists in 2021.
Young’s works are held in major public collections including Tate, Arts Council Collection, Centre Pompidou, Sharjah Art Foundation, Kadist Foundation and Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst amongst others. Two monographs on her work have been published: Subject to Contract, (JRP|Ringier, 2013), and Carey Young: Incorporated, (Film and Video Umbrella and John Hansard Gallery, 2001). Her research fellowships include the Smithsonian, Wolfson College, University of Oxford, the Law School, Birkbeck, University of London, and the Institut d’Études et de la Recherche sur le Droit et de la Justice, Paris. Young is represented by Paula Cooper Gallery, New York. www.careyyoung.com
Supporters of Carey Young: Appearance
Arts Council England, Paula Cooper Gallery, UCL Grand Challenges, UCL HEIF Knowledge and Innovation Fund, UCL Dean’s Award, UCL Judicial Institute, Leverhulme Trust, Slade School of Fine Art, The Lord Chief Justice, Ede & Ravenscroft, TORCH, SIGMA Corporation, Wolfson College (University of Oxford), Humanities Cultural Programme (TORCH, University of Oxford), Elephant Trust, Daiwa Foundation, Annick Mottet, SohoSonic Studios.
Modern Art Oxford is supported by Arts Council England, Oxford City Council and Lavazza.