Yesim
Akdeniz, “the radical mind, silent echo come revolution!”, 2015, oil on canvas,
200x245 cm., (© 2015 Yesim Akdeniz, with the permission of the Pi Artworks London). |
Pi
Artworks London is pleased to announce “The Secret Life of My Coffee Table”, an
exhibition of new paintings by Yeşim Akdeniz runs from 22 May to 27 June 2015. This is the artist’s fourth
London exhibition, after group shows at The Saatchi Gallery and the European
Commission and a two-person exhibition at West London Projects.
Akdeniz
paints fictive landscapes and interiors inhabited by a sparse array of design
objects and architecture borrowed from our recent past. While the
juxtapositions within the picture plane are surreal, the subjects, depicted
with smooth surfaces and a soft and muted palette, are unambiguous and unmistakable
for anything else. Each series is tied together by an underlying concept that
comes through the artist’s close reading of psychoanalysis, philosophy, and
architectural theory, though the paintings are not composed with the intention
of being read in a linear fashion.
Yesim Akdeniz, “the ready-made planet”, 2015,
oil on canvas, 160x145 cm., (© 2015 Yesim Akdeniz, with the permission of the Pi Artworks London). |
For
“The Secret Life of My Coffee Table”, Akdeniz has produced a series of
paintings of the exterior of iconic stone buildings that are partially
submerged by clear and calm bodies of water. Alongside this are depictions of
the building’s interiors that contain stylish furniture as well as piles of
rocks whose purpose is uncertain. These seemingly post-apocalyptic scenes
suggest a potential future where our buildings and design objects in their
various forms remain as our sole survivors.
The
inspiration behind the series is a childhood memory of Carl Gustav Jung –
founder of Analytical Psychology. As a young boy, he felt uncertain about
himself and the world. One day, he put a carved manikin and a black stone in a
pencil case and hid it in his attic. Without knowing why, the secret box and its
contents gave the young boy courage and comfort. Years later, he remembered
this long-forgotten act when reading about the ancient soul-stones of
Arlesheim, Germany. For Jung, it became clear that the stone from his childhood
had - unknowingly - a similar function as that of the soul-stones. As one of the world’s oldest witnesses these
stones where seen as imbued with a sense of wisdom and ‘being’ and therefore a
calming effect. The fact that this stone ritual was practiced in a similar way
in an ancient time he had no knowledge of led to Jung’s proposition that our
species shares a collective unconscious made up of instincts and ancient wisdom
that runs deeper then personal memories.
Informed by this story, as well as Timothy Morton’s texts on “Object Oriented Ontology”, Akdeniz paints buildings and design objects that she feels are both hallmarks of our modern society as well as ‘encrypted’ with inherent characteristics that tap into our collective unconscious. As the world around us increasingly filled with our own inorganic constructions and designs, they become the successors to what Jung saw in his historic stones. Raising the question, how will this relationship change in a contemporary society where an increasing number of the assets we own and interact with exist in dematerialised digital form?
YESIM AKDENIZ
Yeşim
Akdeniz lives and works in Istanbul, Turkey. Solo exhibitions include “Opposing
and Those Sympathizing”, Dirimart, Istanbul, Turkey (2014); “A Dream Within a
Dream”, PAK Kunstverein, Glückstadt, Germany (2011); “The New Professionals”,
Galerie Fons Welters, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2008); Sterblichkeit hat
ihren Preis, Produzentengalerie, Hamburg (2007); “The Man”, West London
Projects, London, UK (2006); and “Cocaine Nights”, Galerie Klinkhammer und
Metzner, Düsseldorf (2002). Group exhibitions include “Sanat International”, 12
Star Gallery, London (2015); “Le peintre de la modern”, Galerie Jochen Hempel,
Leipzig, Germany (2013); “Signs Taken in Wonder”, Museum für angewandtekunst/
MAK, Vienna, Austria (2013); “Wir Drei”, Guggenheim Gallery, Los Angeles, USA
(2013); “Confessions of Dangerous Minds”, Saatchi Gallery, London UK (2011);
and “20/20 Vision”, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam The Netherlands (2004). Her
work can be found in private collections such as the Deutsche Bank Collection
and Nederlandsche Bank Collection, in Germany, and museum collections such as
the Fries museum and De ateliers, in Amsterdam and the Netherlands.
For
more information please contact: Neil Jefferies (nj@piartworks.com) or call +44
207 637 8403