Jannis Kounellis, Ambika P3 | reviews, news & interviews
Jannis Kounellis, Ambika P3
Jannis Kounellis, Ambika P3
Veteran Arte Povera artist pays homage to the little man in P3's vast, industrial space
Thursday, 29 April 2010
Last year, visitors to Tate Modern’s Artists’ Rooms could see a room dedicated to Jannis Kounellis. It was filled with some of his most resonant work: a door filled up with drystone walling; burlap sacks of grain, rice, pulses; metal bells. For a founder-member of the Arte Povera movement, it was surprisingly bucolic.
Now, in the bowels of the University of Westminster, past a car park and in what was probably once a series of machine rooms, the other side of Kounellis is on view. As always, he is working with everyday materials, but these are now industrialised – coal, metal, steel, and the city-worker’s historic trademark, the black coat and hat.
These symbols have particular resonance in this space. The show begins in the largest room, its yellowed, dripping walls and concrete floor housing a huge steel structure shaped like a "K" – Kounellis, to be sure, but even more, Kafka, and possibly even Kafka’s Amerika, whose working title was The Man Who Disappeared. Kounellis has always been determined that, through his art, Kafka’s little men do not disappear, do not get overlooked. This large-scale sculpture addesses the industrial nature of the world, topped as it is with tons of coal, covered with mass-produced bottles tightly strapped in with steel guy ropes, covered with heavy black cloth. The sculpture looms above the visitors dodging in and out of the blind alleys of the "K", passing "windows" of glass bottles that cannot be seen through, searching for a centre that does not exist. Only from above, from both ends of the gallery, can the overall shape be determined and its meaning deduced: distance brings clarity.
This is a world where constraints are constant, where views are occluded, where industry towers over everything. Through an archway, hats and coats line the walls of an alcove (pictured below; photo Manolis Baboussis), some on industrial rails, some pierced through and hung from butcher’s hooks. More bottled panels above promise a vista on to something, while more dense black fabric prevents it; a sewing machine dangles (main picture; photo Michael Maziere), stressing the manufactured nature of what we cover ourselves in.
More little-man travels can be seen in another piece, a large black bundle, tied and lurking in a corner: the characteristic makeshift pack of the immigrant, the pedlar. At a distance, it’s a great brooding black void, sucking in light. Another coat and hat are placed more demurely on a coat-rack, which then crazily hangs in the air, suspended by yet more steel ropes; across the room, a woman’s silk nightgown similarly hangs, the two fetishised, "empty" bodies kept apart, always within sight, always untouchable.
Kounellis has been working with a limited number of materials and themes for most of his artistic life, but this in no way indicates a poverty of imagination. Instead he is a composer, creating theme and variation, weaving rhythm, regularity and repetition together and then separating them out, making us look, in his humane exploration of identity and cosmic inevitability, not only at the objects of our existence but at our existence itself.
He always returns, however, to his black-coated worker, to the little man, Chaplin’s tramp, who picks himself up, making what he can of his world and walking on, without false hope, but also without resentment, without delusion. For such dark, spare art, the mood is always surprisingly, not optimistic, but benign. This is the world. It is what it is. But we can also become greater than the sum of our parts. We are Kafka’s Josef K. But Josef K was, as all little men are, a great man. Kounellis lets us be that too.
These symbols have particular resonance in this space. The show begins in the largest room, its yellowed, dripping walls and concrete floor housing a huge steel structure shaped like a "K" – Kounellis, to be sure, but even more, Kafka, and possibly even Kafka’s Amerika, whose working title was The Man Who Disappeared. Kounellis has always been determined that, through his art, Kafka’s little men do not disappear, do not get overlooked. This large-scale sculpture addesses the industrial nature of the world, topped as it is with tons of coal, covered with mass-produced bottles tightly strapped in with steel guy ropes, covered with heavy black cloth. The sculpture looms above the visitors dodging in and out of the blind alleys of the "K", passing "windows" of glass bottles that cannot be seen through, searching for a centre that does not exist. Only from above, from both ends of the gallery, can the overall shape be determined and its meaning deduced: distance brings clarity.
This is a world where constraints are constant, where views are occluded, where industry towers over everything. Through an archway, hats and coats line the walls of an alcove (pictured below; photo Manolis Baboussis), some on industrial rails, some pierced through and hung from butcher’s hooks. More bottled panels above promise a vista on to something, while more dense black fabric prevents it; a sewing machine dangles (main picture; photo Michael Maziere), stressing the manufactured nature of what we cover ourselves in.
More little-man travels can be seen in another piece, a large black bundle, tied and lurking in a corner: the characteristic makeshift pack of the immigrant, the pedlar. At a distance, it’s a great brooding black void, sucking in light. Another coat and hat are placed more demurely on a coat-rack, which then crazily hangs in the air, suspended by yet more steel ropes; across the room, a woman’s silk nightgown similarly hangs, the two fetishised, "empty" bodies kept apart, always within sight, always untouchable.
Kounellis has been working with a limited number of materials and themes for most of his artistic life, but this in no way indicates a poverty of imagination. Instead he is a composer, creating theme and variation, weaving rhythm, regularity and repetition together and then separating them out, making us look, in his humane exploration of identity and cosmic inevitability, not only at the objects of our existence but at our existence itself.
He always returns, however, to his black-coated worker, to the little man, Chaplin’s tramp, who picks himself up, making what he can of his world and walking on, without false hope, but also without resentment, without delusion. For such dark, spare art, the mood is always surprisingly, not optimistic, but benign. This is the world. It is what it is. But we can also become greater than the sum of our parts. We are Kafka’s Josef K. But Josef K was, as all little men are, a great man. Kounellis lets us be that too.
- Jannis Kounellis, presented by Sprovieri Gallery, is at Ambika P3, University of Westminster until 30 May
Subscribe to theartsdesk.com
Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.
To take a subscription now simply click here.
And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?
more Visual arts
Vanessa Bell, MK Gallery review - diving into and out of abstraction
A variation of styles as the Bloomsbury artist breaks free from Victorian mores
Lygia Clark: The I and the You, Sonia Boyce: An Awkward Relation, Whitechapel Gallery review - breaking boundaries
Two artists, 50 years apart, invite audience participation
Mike Kelley: Ghost and Spirit, Tate Modern review - adolescent angst indefinitely extended
The artist who refused to grow up
Monet and London, Courtauld Gallery review - utterly sublime smog
Never has pollution looked so compellingly beautiful
Michael Craig-Martin, Royal Academy review - from clever conceptual art to digital decor
A career in art that starts high and ends low
Van Gogh: Poets & Lovers, National Gallery review - passions translated into paint
Turmoil made manifest
Peter Kennard: Archive of Dissent, Whitechapel Gallery review - photomontages sizzling with rage
Fifty years of political protest by a master craftsman
Dominique White: Deadweight, Whitechapel Gallery review - sculptures that seem freighted with history
Dunked in the sea to give them a patina of age, sculptures that feel timeless
Bill Viola (1951-2024) - a personal tribute
Video art and the transcendent
In the Eye of the Storm: Modernism in Ukraine 1900-1930s, Royal Academy review - famous avant-garde Russian artists who weren't Russian after all
A glimpse of important Ukrainian artists
Francis Alÿs: Ricochets, Barbican review - fun for the kids, yet I was moved to tears
How to be serious and light hearted at the same time
Gavin Jantjes: To Be Free, Whitechapel Gallery review - a sweet and sour response to horrific circumstances
Seething anger is cradled within beautiful images
Add comment