Disclaimer
A fellowship project by Carey Young
Gallery 4, Henry Moore Institute
3 July – 3 Oct 2004
Following her fellowship at the Henry Moore Institute Carey Young, (b. 1970) will make four new works for Gallery 4. Young is a London-based artist who has become recognised for works across a variety of media which investigate the increasing incorporation of the personal and public domains into the realm of the commercial. Young’s show at the Henry Moore Institute will explore the connections between legal 'disclaimers' and notions of negative space.
Disclaimers are ‘legalese’; the small print which has appeared with increasing prevalence at the end of emails or on websites. In essence, disclaimers allow authors, publishers or (often corporate) hosts to protect themselves by denouncing responsibility for what they or their employees have said, creating a kind of absence or ‘negative space’ around communication, meaning what has been said is also termed ‘unsaid’.
Carey Young has developed four new works which expand on this theme. She has collaborated with Massimo Sterpi, a notable intellectual property lawyer and art law expert, to create three disclaimers which appear as black text on white panels. Alluding to Joseph Beuy's term ‘social sculpture’, in which language is seen as a sculptural form, Sterpi and Young's disclaimers uses a legal precision to destabilise the status of the relationship between artwork, viewer and exhibition context.
The fourth piece, 'Terms and Conditions', is a video which features a smiling woman enunciating a disclaimer whilst standing in an idyllic rural landscape, replete with references to the painterly landscape tradition. The text has been drawn from a series of corporate websites. As the woman performs, references to the digital 'site' of the disclaimer and the 'site' of the landscape seem to merge. The dislocated, distanced language of the speech take on a different association: the language of the corporate void, a void which has come to engulf everyday life, and yet which remains, at present, largely unaccountable.
Carey Young was born in Lusaka, Zambia and trained at the Royal College of Art, London. She has exhibited in Beck's Futures (ICA, 2003), A Short History of Performance, Part II (Whitechapel Gallery, 2003) and has recently lectured on her work at the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
ENDS
For more information or images please contact Mary Minshull: Tel: 0113 2467467 / e-mail: mary@henry-moore.ac.uk
Note to editors: The Henry Moore Institute is a centre dedicated to the study of sculpture and is one of three programming areas of The Henry Moore Foundation, the others being Henry Moore Collections and Exhibitions and Contemporary Projects, both based at The Foundation’s estate in Perry Green, Hertfordshire. The Institute is located in the centre of Leeds and comprises three integrated elements dedicated to sculpture: collections, exhibitions and research.