The Sheer Entertainment Value of the City’s Sights, Sounds and Smells: Gilbert and George at the Heywood Gallery

I’ve often felt vaguely apologetic about my affection for Gilbert and George. There’s something enthusiastically populist about their work which, if I’m honest, sometimes makes me feel it ought to be taken less seriously than it is. But the current exhibition at the Heywood Gallery immediately brought to mind something Hannah Arendt once said about “the sheer entertainment value” of the world’s “views, sounds, and smells”. It struck me how well this characterised their aesthetic in its joyful celebration of how engaging the ethnographic dazzle of the city is. Even when dark material enters into it this exists within the same register, such as the sensory overload which comes with a barrage of headlines about murders and violence. There’s something about this insistence on a uniform register which really appeals to me: a refusal to put on a serious voice to discuss serious matters but rather to recognise them in terms of the continual overflow of sights, sounds and smells which constitute urban life. Perhaps I’m particularly attuned to this because it was the first Saturday afternoon I’ve spent in London for years and certainly the first once since I began to recognise my brain’s ADHD wiring. I was finding the centre overwhelming in a way I just don’t on week days. This left me with a sense of their work’s phenomenological authenticity which I don’t think it would have carried under other circumstances.

Installation shot from Gilbert & George: 21st CENTURY PICTURES @ Hayward Gallery

Their work surfs the intensities of the city in a way that is faithful to the emotions involved: excitement, lust, anger, sadness were the ones that stood out to me in the show. I was particularly struck by the latter in their more recent work, as the gaze upon themselves implicit in their self-representation seemed to suggest a tiredness and melancholy in the face of their own ageing. The ‘living sculpture’ seemed to carry a new weight as they aged, with a more introspective tone in which the chosen visibility feels somewhat more ambiguous than in the early work. 

I was also struck by how obviously one of the works seemed to be communicating a sense of shame, or at least hiding. It surprised me this seemed to be the only work grappling with homophobia in a psychological sense and seemed in some ways to fall outside the typical range of their work. I stupidly didn’t get the name or a photo because I had no phone with me. It was a depiction of two eyes covered by a pile of leaves and conveyed to me a sense of internalised shame. As if it was an admission of hiding behind the compulsive and stylised hyper-visibility which characterises a huge body of work in which they uniformly insert themselves as presences. 

There remains part of me which wants to insist on a dour critique of the privilege which underwrites their celebration. Two wealthy men unconsciously celebrating the vibrancy of the urban certainly invites it, even taking into account their skilful incorporation of bleak themes into the register of the vibrant. But I don’t want to do that because it feels like it entirely misunderstands the spirit in which their work is offered. There’s a warmth to it which I never noticed when I saw this work in isolation, a cumulative humane atmosphere which I found quite affecting. Seeing the work accumulated across decades, particularly as they aged and changed, created a warmth through repetition that I hadn’t expected. It was more than the sum of its parts in a deeply affecting way.

#ethnographicDazzle #GilbertAndGeorge #hannahArendt #HeywoodGallery #urbanism

💛 Couples 💛

Gilbert Prousch + George Passmore are artists who work together as the collaborative art duo Gilbert & George. They are known for their performance art, + brightly coloured photo-based artworks.

The 2 met in 1967 while studying. They say their meeting was love at first sight. In 2017 they celebrated their 50th anniversary as collaborators

#couples #gilbertandgeorge #georgeprousch #georgepassmore #performanceart #valentines #valentinesday #happyvalentinesday #artworld #love

@retrosponge Gilbert and George, the sculpture, were to adopt Dave Dee Dozy Beaky Mick and Tich’s hit Bend It as a part of their work

https://youtu.be/9OGziyW-_FY?si=ZEWfJ_6LcdAK3S-Q

They went on tour in the late 60s and at one point hit Düsseldorf, where they indubitably influenced early experimental musicians and artists such as Ralf Hütter, Florian Schneider-Esleben and Emil Schult, who immediately discarded the long-haired free-form improvisation of krautrock and turned Kraftwerk into a highly formal highly designed artistic expression by also wearing suits, close cut hair, and rigid movements as detailed in this excellent video about Kraftwerk’s development here, by Dr Richard Witts, (formerly of the 80s post-punk band The Passage)

https://youtu.be/5KTwCZ-wNu8?si=-N90cQEZowCDbrtg

#DaveDeeDozyBeakyMickAndTich #GilbertAndGeorge # #Kraftwerk
Gilbert & George "Bend It"

YouTube
@emsquared @Kealoha321 if any Kraftwerk aficionados have about three quarters of an hour spare, I recommend this lecture by Dr Richard Witts (who used to be Dick Witts of the very interesting early 80s post-punk band The Passage) – it really is worth a watch, keep with it

https://youtu.be/5KTwCZ-wNu8?si=eYtO_lPYC1Q-HStu
#Kraftwerk #Germany #DickWitts #GilbertAndGeorge
KRAFTWERK UNCOVERED TALK

YouTube
THE GILBERT + GEORGE CENTRE

   

THE GILBERT + GEORGE CENTRE
Visited the Gilbert & George Centre off #BrickLane in the morning. Lovely place, very recently opened,with a small display of their works from 2019. #GilbertAndGeorge And after that a visit to my favourite bookstore, #Libreria, a few blocks away. Sadly, or luckily, could not buy anything as my luggage carrying capability is limited… If I lived in London I would visit that bookstore often and buy way more books than I can read.
Gilbert and George: The Paradisical Pictures opens the Gilbert and George Centre, London, on 1 April. The Corpsing Pictures is at White Cube Mason’s Yard, London from 29 March to 20 May. https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2023/mar/22/warhol-rauschenberg-gilbert-and-george-preserve-greatest-moments-centre #Art #GilbertandGeorge
‘Warhol cooked us scrambled eggs. Or was it Rauschenberg?’ – Gilbert and George preserve their greatest moments

Now in their 80s, the ‘living sculpture’ couple have built a free gallery to ensure their creations last for ever. Our writer gets a tour of the centre – and its mind-boggling inaugural show

The Guardian
@Curator I wonder how many of us still have a copy of #GilbertAndGeorge Planed? On 8 May 2007, for 48hrs only, you could download it from the #BBC and #Guardian websites, print it, and frame it to hang at home. These days it would have been an NFT, which is no fun at all by comparison. When I saw Gilbert and George walking towards me a few years later, I wanted to say, I have a piece of your art, but I didn't. I just smiled and said, love your work, and they completely ignored me.