Projects

Out of the Margins

PROJECT CO-ORGANISED BY GAVIN FEATURED IN EXHIBITION

30 August 2022 – 15 January 2023
Christa Holka's photograph of Vaginal Davis performing as part of Trashing Performance in 2011

Read the Whitechapel’s exhibition blurb below:

Out of the Margins examined the shifts in institutional engagement with live art, highlighting key moments that raised this cultural practice from underground and marginalised to an acknowledged art form.

Throughout the 1990s, established visual arts institutions in London began programming live art more systematically, and new organisations were founded with a mission to support the development of performance art. This exhibition revisited seminal moments in this history from Lois Keidan’s incorporation and adaption of underground nightclub performances at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in 1996, to the inception of the Live Art Development Agency (LADA) in 1999, and the milestone series A Short History of Performance (I, II, III, IV) at Whitechapel Gallery between 2002 and 2006.

Out of the Margins mapped the live art scene by looking at initiatives of various kinds of organisations such as Gasworks, Matt’s Gallery, and The Roberts Institute of Art, which were vital in enabling a range of experimental and ephemeral practices in London. Also featured was Performance Matters, a collaborative research project established by Goldsmiths, University of London, University of Roehampton and LADA to analyse the critical discourse around performance. Through the above and a range of live art events that followed, not only in London but across the UK, performance art assumed its place in the institutional realm, culminating in the 2012 opening of The Tanks at Tate Modern, a dedicated space in a major UK museum.

Rarely seen archive material, photo and film documentation from the period were showcased in this exhibit, as well as references to key artists, theoreticians and cultural producers who elevated the status of performance within the visual arts.