Le Plateau
Paris

Action Jusqu'à la Balle Crystal, 9th Biennale de Paris, 1975 © Courtesy of Cosey Fanni Tutti and Cabinet, London

A Study in Scarlet

 

Grand opening on Wednesday 16 May, from 6pm to 9pm

Exhibition curator : Gallien Déjean

With Ethan Assouline, Beau Geste Press, Lynda Benglis, Kévin Blinderman : masternantes, Pauline Boudry / Renate Lorenz, Jean-Louis Brau & Claude Palmer, Monte Cazazza, Chris & Cosey, COUM Transmissions, Vaginal Davis, Brice Dellsperger, Casey Jane Ellison, Harun Farocki, Karen Finley, Brion Gysin, Hendrik Hegray, Her Noise Archive, Robert Morris, Ebecho Muslimova, Meret Oppenheim, Pedro, Muriel & Esther, Lili Reynaud-Dewar, Christophe de Rohan Chabot, Louise Sartor, Throbbing Gristle, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Amalia Ulman and Les Vagues.

 

Cosey Fanni Tutti (b. 1951 in Kinston-up on-Hull, England) is well known as a member of the English group Throbbing Gristle, which had a significant impact on the late 1970s’ experimental music scene. Besides her musical activities, Cosey developed a unique body of work defined by her actions within the pornographic industry. The collective exhibition A Study in Scarlet takes her work as its point of departure to present a series of forms, gestures and attitudes through which other artists and performers exceed normative structures of identity and gender.

In 1976, the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) in London presented Prostitution, an exhibition initiated by the performance and mail art collective COUM Transmissions. Founded in 1969, COUM was markedly influenced by Dada, Beat poetry, Viennese Actionism, counterculture and occultism. Prior to theICA exhibition, Chris Carter, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Genesis P-Orridge and Peter ‘Sleazy’ Christopherson formed a new musical entity called Throbbing Gristle, which attained cult status as the originators of the industrial electronic music.

At the ICA, it was not so much the band’s bruitalist performance on the opening night that shocked the public than the licentious content of the exhibition. A series of pornographic magazines with pictures of Cosey Fanni Tutti, framed as works of art, was presented in a restricted space that could be entered upon request. Although it lasted only a few days, the exhibition sparked public anger which, kindled by the tabloids, spread from the art world to Parliament and prompted a political debate on moral order and public expenditure in art.

The work of Cosey Fanni Tutti – both her corpus of pornographic magazines and her performances – is based on an emancipatory practice that transgresses institutional or social structures. When the artist worked in the porn industry as a model and actress for several years, she adopted a paradoxical self-representation strategy, as she freed herself from a fixed identity, by incarnating the various female stereotypes (secretary, maid, ingenue . . .) circulated by an essentially heteronormed industry. By exhibiting herself as multiple personae (through her poses, clothes and roles), Cosey Fanni Tutti questions the public’s essentialist conception of femininity. At the same time, she reveals the archetypes and normativity of the patriarchal fantasies generated by the capitalist industry and, like a mirror, turns the desiring gaze back onto itself.

Neither a retrospective nor a historical or monographic survey, A Study in Scarlet was conceived as a nebula of works revolving around Cosey Fanni Tutti’s artistic legacy, looking at its influences (Beat Generation, Fluxus), companions (COUM Transmissions, Monte Cazazza) and contemporaries (Karen Finley), while crossing various issues or strategies also used in more recent practices: infiltrating an institution or industry (artistic, pornographic, musical), integrating the body into a production line, overturning a norm by exacerbating it or making it redundant, self-representing and self-defining one’s own identity, ‘pro-sex’ feminism, the visibility of women on radical music scenes, etc.

A Study in Scarlet is not a thematic exhibition – it is not a project on pornography. Without aiming to be exhaustive, it rather seeks to construct a reflection through practices and gestures, both historical and contemporary, that must be seen in light of the similarities and specificities of the contexts in which they emerged. As tools for emancipation and a rearranging of identities, these strategies operate at the very heart of the channels of cultural distribution, consumption and communication the better to subvert them.

A Study in Scarlet furthermore examines the relationships between the artist and the model – a recurring motif that several participants in the exhibition, such as Vaginal Davis and Christophe de Rohan Chabot, aim to deconstruct or invert. In art, the construction of the gaze is historically based on relationships of gender and domination (man/woman, artist/model, dressed/naked, hidden/exposed). Working in the porn business, Cosey Fanni Tutti consciously re-enacted these age-old patterns. By infiltrating a realm that lies beyond the traditional reaches of art, she deliberately imperilled her status as an artist. Indeed, as a model, she had to partly relinquish creative authority to the industry operators who circulated her image, starting with the photographers in charge of staging it. By attacking the traditional prerogatives of the artist, Cosey Fanni Tutti renewed the anti-hierarchical strategies developed by the historical avant-gardes, applying them to the networks of media production and distribution of the post-industrial capitalist system.

 

!! As some works may contain images that may offend the sensibilities of visitors,
the entrance of the exhibition is not allowed to minors under 18 years old. !!
Curator
Gallien Déjean (born in 1978, lives and works in Paris) is an art critic and curator. He teaches art history and theory at the École cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL) in Switzerland and at the École nationale supérieure d’arts de Paris-Cergy (ENSAPC) in France.  He is a member of Treize, an organization of production, exhibition, and publication. He recently organized the first retrospective about the English art collective BANK (Self Portrait – BANK’s Archives & Relics – 1991-2003 at Treize in 2012 and at Elaine MGK, Basel in 2013). Between 2013 and 2015, he works at le Palais de Tokyo as curator. In 2013, he co-organized the collective exhibition titled Le Club des sous l’eau, based on filmmaker Jean Painlevé’s activities. As writer and editor, he published several books. In 2016, he coordinated the edition of the catalogue of UNdocumenta, a film festival organized at the Asia Culture Center-Theater in Gwangju (Corea). He is preparing a catalogue about BANK which will be published by Primary Information, NY (The Bank Fax-Bak Service).

 

 

 

rendez-vous

 

TIME TO TELL
Program of meetings, performances, concerts…

Cosey Fanni Tutti

Meeting
With Nicolas Ballet and Gallien Déjean
Wednesday 06.06.18
7.30pm

Brice Dellsperger
Screening and meeting
Body Double (X)
Wednesday 27.06.18
7.30pm

Nos Désirs liquides
Les Vagues invites artists, researchers, performers and artists collectives, to create with them a program of films, feminists pro-sex, transformists and queers interventions.
!! Look out !!
Date as changed, here is the new one :
Sunday 01.07.18
From 10am

Nicolas Ballet
Post-doctoral researcher in art history at the Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne 
Convention «Alpha females». Transgressions féministes des musiques industrielles (1976-1996)
Wednesday 04.07.18
7.30pm

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PLATEAU-APÉRO
Wednesday 06.06.18
Wednesday 04.07.18
Late-night openings, up until 9pm, every 1st Wednesdays of the month

 

CURATOR’S TOUR
Sunday 10.06.18
5.30pm
with Gallien Déjean

 

GUIDED TOURS
Every Sunday at 4pm
Meeting-place at the reception

 

Journal de l’exposition