<   >

Exhibition opening at the home of the late JOHN LATHAM, London, 2 Oct - 2 Nov

Posted on August 28, 2008 at 12:55 PM.

Keep Reading in ------ :

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Exhibition Title: Distress of a Dictionary

Artist Name: JOHN LATHAM
Dates: 2 October – 2 November 2008
Website: http://www.lissongallery.com/#/artists/john-latham/

Exhibition Description:

The John Latham Foundation have announced the opening of Flat Time House (FTHo), the home of the late artist, John Latham (1921 - 2006). Latham was one of the most important British artists of the post-war period and lived at FTHo in Peckham, South East London for over 20 years.

The House has now become the home of the John Latham Foundation and the John Latham Archive. It will also be the primary location for a 10-month programme of exhibitions and events exploring the artist's practice, his theoretical ideas and their continued relevance.

The opening exhibition, Distress of a Dictionary, will be a solo exhibition exploring the role of language and humour in Latham's work. Latham considered his house a 'living sculpture', and named the different rooms after the attributes of a living organism.

Description:

The Image: They’re learning fast, 1988
Fish tank, pages from “Report of a Surveyor”, piranha fish
47 x 91 x 30 cm
Courtesy John Latham Estate and Lisson Gallery
© The Artist

The Artist and FTHo: A giant and colourful book-relief sculpture penetrates a large window on the front of the FTHo, known as the Face, into a room called the Mind, in which a permanent installation of works demonstrating Latham's Time-Base Theory has been maintained.

The next room has been called the Brain. Latham described this space as his area for 'rational thought' and this is where he worked on his theoretical writing and correspondence. This will be the home to the John Latham Archive.

The Hand, formerly Latham's studio, will be the main location for the programme of events taking place. The rest of the house is taken up with what is termed the 'Body Event', where eating, sleeping and 'plumbing' take place.

The actual house name derives from John's theoretical language, in which 'Flat Time' describes the way in which time and events can be represented by the length and width of a flat canvas, demonstrated in works including Time-Base Roller (1972. Tate Collection).

Latham is best known for his painting and sculpture, using materials of glass, books, canvas and the spray gun. From the mid-1950s onwards, Latham began developing a cosmological theory, formulated through his art-making discoveries that considered time and event to be more primary than the established means of understanding, based on space and matter.

He called this his Time-Base Theory and it offers an ordering and unification of all events in the universe including human actions, allowing an understanding of the special status of the artist in society, and this is represented by a permanent installation at FTHo.

John Latham has been associated with several national and international artistic movements since he began showing work in the late 1940s. His work has been exhibited internationally, including recent solos at Tate Britain (2005) and PS1, New York (2006). Latham has been represented by Lisson Gallery since 1970.

Full Contact Details:

Flat Time House, 210 Bellenden Road, London, SE15 4BW
Hours: (during exhibitions): Thursday - Sunday, 11am - 5pm
FTHo will also be open by appointment for private study and research.
Admission: Free
Directions: The nearest train station is Peckham Rye. Regular bus services operate
to Peckham Rye or Peckham Square.

Leave a comment

Mail this Entry

Email this entry to

Your email address

Message (optional)

You can get Art Investment News updates by joining us on Twitter!

Read all posts by Tracy Frost »

View more of our galleries...

Tate Modern, Bankside, London Tate Britain, Millbank Camden Arts Centre, North London Saatchi Gallery, Duke of York HQ building, King's Road, Chelsea The Royal Academy of Arts, Burlington Gardens Rivington Place, Shoreditch The Drawing Room, Laburnum St Serpentine Gallery, Kensington Gardens Royal College of Art, Kensington Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), Carlton House Terrace The Arts Gallery, University of the Arts Whitechapel Art Gallery, East London Umberto Boccioni in Futurism at Tate Modern, London, 12 Jun - 20 Sep Richard Long at the Tate Britain, London, 3 Jun - 6 Sep Michael Raedecker at Camden Arts Centre, London, 1 May - 28 Jun Tate Britain Duveens Commission: Eva Rothschild, 29 June to 29 Nov Per Kirkeby at the Tate Modern, London, 17 June - 6 Sep The Unilever Series: Miroslaw Balka, Tate Modern, London, 13 Oct  -  5 Apr The Artist in the Age of Publicity at Tate Modern, London, 1 Oct  -  17 Jan Altermodern: Tate Triennial 2009 at the Tate Britain, 3 Feb - 26 Apr An exhibition of Liz Arnold's work at Camden Arts Centre, London, 20 Feb - 19 Apr Christopher Le Brun, UBS Openings, 80's paintings at the Tate Modern to 13 Apr 09 Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster at the Tate Modern, London, until 13 Apr GSK Contemporary, Royal Academy Daan van Golden at Camden Arts Centre, until 8 Feb Giulio Paolini at Lisson Gallery, London, 26 Nov - 17 Jan Fernando Ortega at Lisson Gallery, London, 26 Nov - 17 Jan Turner Prize Exhibition 2008 at the Tate Britain until 18 Jan 2009 Francis Bacon at Tate Britain, Linbury Galleries, London, until 4th Jan Lucy Clout at Limoncello, London, 14 Nov - 20 Dec