The Arts Catalyst and P3 invite you to

THE NEIGHBOUR
Ashok Sukumaran

The neighbour, neither friend nor enemy, is the one who may not be in
your "network", but is nevertheless in your world. (Sukumaran)

An Arts Catalyst commission
Private view 6pm, Thursday 12 March 2009

P3, University of Westminster
35 Marylebone Road, London, NW1 5LS, UK
Exhibition open 13 March - 9 April 2009

Entrance via red gate opposite Baker Street tube
Admission free
www.artscatalyst.org


Bombay-based Ashok Sukumaran is one of the few artists in the world
making work that directly addresses issues of infrastructure: the
ideological and human landscape that surrounds material and
informational transports such as water, electricity, and trade. Beyond
the logic of access through infrastructure, his work engages with
questions of proximity, hierarchy, directionality and doubt amidst the
"networks". This March, The Arts Catalyst and P3 present Sukumaran's new
installation The Neighbour in P3, in what used to be a giant
concrete-testing hall, deep under the University of Westminster in
central London.

This ambitious project is Sukumaran's first major one-person exhibition
in the UK. In The Neighbour, two ostensibly "mobile" habitats share
space. One is a "static" mobile home from the late 1970's, which
developed as a way for lower-middle class families to partake in
"caravan culture", and escape from the city and its property regimes.
The other, coming in from another direction, is a camper van, which in
the same historical period tried to imagine the continuously nomadic
home, built in the car factory.

These two objects, from the inside and out, allow us to inhabit
contemporary questions around the "housing industry", its overlapping
landscapes of desire, and the psychic spaces of enclosure and spacing
that have evolved not just among people, but also among competing
machines, and their regulatory frameworks.

Sukumaran: "These are maybe second cousins, somewhere between the family
and the polis. We are neighbours as a result of our mutual migration,
from more traditional forms of modernity. This is then an allegory of
neighbourhood, caused by our inability to escape each other."

Psychological analyses of the neighbour (from Freud to Zizek) suggest
the "logical tragedy" between a love of freedom, and love of the
neighbour.  The landscape darkens, and curiosity, obsession and
suspicion appear as deep forces that overflow the ideology of tolerance,
or "safe distance".  The neighbour remains largely unknowable, opaque.

Sukumaran: "Lurkers, pests, potential collaborators, potential spies,
potential contaminants seems to appear often in our recent work. Their
threat or presence shapes relations, and gives rise to the leaks,
negotiations and traversals that we are interested in, those that test
the network paradigm."

Ashok Sukumaran (b.1974) came to international prominence with the
extraordinary work Glow Positioning System, 2005: a public lighting
installation that involved collaborations with street decorators, shop
owners and local residents to allow a hand-turned crank to move a giant
panorama of lights, traversing a city square in Bombay.  His recent work
is commissioned and exhibited internationally. In 2008, he co-founded
CAMP, a space for critical artistic research and archiving projects.


Sukumaran was awarded the first prize of the 2005 UNESCO Digital Arts
Award, and received a Golden Nica at the Prix Ars Electronica, 2007.  He
recently showed (with Shaina Anand) the video ensemble "Lossfulness"  in
the Indian Highway exhibition at the Serpentine Gallery, London and is
currently developing (with CAMP) a two-part work on the sea trade to
Somalia, for the Sharjah Biennale, 2008.

The Arts Catalyst
Toynbee Studios
28 Commercial Street
London E1 6LS
UK
e ad...@artscatalyst.org
www.artscatalyst.org

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