19 January - 25 February
‘On the edge of fashion’ is a group exhibition of new works from Arlette, Alfa Bransfield, Aaron Ford, Jonah Pontzer and Mary Stephenson. The works in the show wrestle with social, political and cultural anxieties prominent today: class, capital, empire and the crisis of masculinity. Atop a ‘dynasty pink’ carpeted floor, shrouded in glamour and harnessing the power and language of advertising, like a stealth Trojan horse they revisit cultural trauma anew. Just as McQueen reconfigured and restaged the ‘rape’ of Scotland through the manipulation of fabric, so too do the artists in the exhibition navigate contemporary concerns through form, materiality and humorous deception.
In Arlette’s XXXL Buckle Belt, an enlarged cowboy belt made in silver is set loose of its trousered restraints and, re-oriented, climbs the wall. The buckle’s shine captures a reflection of an absent scene: an image originating from Grindr and then memefied in Mexico of a man in a suit grabbing his penis through his trousers. Overlaid embossed silver text reads ‘skinny dick in the dark’, announcing anxieties that the hyper masculine adornment may ordinarily be intended to obscure.
In Alfa Bransfield’s Three (Thug Votive), an image of a heavy gold neck chain, rendered in diamanté set onto engraved aluminium, is taken from screenshots of his own social media algorithms in which his marketable personality coordinates as a ‘gay chav’ were reflected back through targeted adverts. Bransfield’s work is tinged with tragicomedy, merging bleak critical theory with wanton camp. This chain is both decoration and restraint, signifier of both at once–the wearer’s personal aspirations and their societally imposed limitations.
For Aaron Ford, two paintings, Man Sitting Down and Figure explore traditional Ghanian cloth and its (re) presentation in the mainstream media, and within his own personal history. Man Sitting Down is derived from a found family photo of Ford’s cousin wearing Adinkra cloth while Figure finds genesis in an image sourced from the Met archive, of an anonymous mannequin wearing Kente cloth, staging the personal and the impersonal within the context of cultural production.
Jonah Pontzer’s five panel dressing screen Cancer Son Greets the Day, Dresses Accordingly borrows form from Edouard Vuillard’s Place Vintimille (1911). Speaking to notions of capital, spectacle and artifice, Pontzer delights in the luxuriousness of fashion, the painted panels embellished with a skin like texture reminiscent of the sought-after crocodile skin of a Hermes Kelly bag. The image itself is of a Dressing Spider Crab, a crustacean that adorns itself to appear less conspicuous. Much like the screen itself–an object for privacy and metamorphosis–the act of decoration is not to reveal but to conceal.
Two new paintings from Mary Stephenson, Citrine Green and Middle Red, see the artist using fabric as a method to commune with her unconscious. Laced with anxiety, cloth appears to fold and unfold, reproductive in nature, revealing forms that feel simultaneously yonic and phallic; erotic in their lack of specificity. Gazing at the works, shapes emerge before retreating back into the canvas, inviting the viewer into the amorphous appearances.
Address:
223 Cambridge Heath Rd, London E2 0EL
Fashion at the Edge
In Conversation
Thursday 2 February, 7 pm
On the occasion of its re-issue, Fashion at the Edge author Caroline Evans will be in conversation with Alfa Bransfield, Aaron Ford, Jonah Pontzer and Mary Stephenson.