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3rd February, 2014

CHELSEA space: Almost Bliss: Notes on Derek Jarman’s Blue

Event Details

Date:
3rd February, 2014
Time:
Tuesday - Friday: 11am - 5pm. Saturday: 10am - 4pm
End Date:
15th March, 2014
Venue:
CHELSEA space, Chelsea College of Arts, 16 John Islip Street, London SW1P 4JU
Price:
Free

Exhibition: 29 January – 15 March 2014 

Almost Bliss is a contemplation on the filmmaker, artist, writer, and activist Derek Jarman. This blue-lit installation centres on a set of Jarman’s hand painted and carefully written notebooks, giving insight into the artist’s creative thinking towards his seminal late film work, Blue. The dates of the exhibition encompass both the date of Jarman’s birth on 31st January 1942 and the date when he died, February 19th 1994, sadly marking the 20th anniversary of the artist’s death.

Almost Bliss gives a sense of what could have been, alluding to the tragedy of Jarman’s premature demise from AIDS related illness aged 52 and referring to the evidence that ‘Bliss’ was the original title for what was to become the filmBlue (‘Bliss’ is etched into a fragment of glass on the cover of the first notebook and the title page announces ‘A Blueprint for Bliss’). Almost Bliss is also the title of a 1990 album of ambient music by Simon Fisher Turner who composed the soundtracks for many of Derek Jarman’s films including Blue.

The exhibition makes reference to two earlier installations linked to Jarman: one by Mark Wallinger in 1994 and another by Peter Fillingham with Keith Collins in 1999. The Wallinger installation was part of a show entitled Every Now and Then by the curatorial collective, Rear Window and set in the Kensington galleries and home of the art dealer Richard Salmon. Prior to his death, Derek Jarman had used one of these purpose built Victorian studios to make his large scale visceral paintings with his assistant and friend Karl Lydon. Wallinger’s installation preserved the atmosphere of the working studio minus the artist; Jarman’s painting paraphernalia – brushes, paints, etc were left in place along with his paint splattered overalls draped over his old armchair. Around the walls were blank canvases and in the middle of the room, a grand piano and the sound of a piano being tuned, giving an overwhelming sense of the potential of all of the art that was never made.

The second reference is to Peter Fillingham and Keith Collins’ Blue rooms for the 1999 exhibition Stimuli at the Witte de With in Rotterdam. Fillingham was invited by former Witte de With Director, Chris Dercon, (currently Director of Tate Modern) to participate in a group exhibition around the themes of physical and hallucinatory experience. Peter Fillingham took Derek Jarman’s Blue as his starting point but, as a close collaborator of Jarman’s, he chose not to make an archive show but rather to create an ambient environment in which to contemplate and celebrate his late friend. Lights and windows were covered in blue gels and photographed pages of Jarman’s Blue notebooks were shown in vitrines (the pages were photographed by Donald Smith, now Director of CHELSEA space and curator of Almost Bliss).

In the blue tinted CHELSEA space installation three notebooks with hand painted gold covers are shown closed whilst facsimile pages of the notebooks line the walls of the exhibiting space. Almost Bliss includes prints, books, a canister of test cinefilm and other ephemera related to Jarman’s Yves Klein-inspired monochrome movie. The show also provides an informal reading room for the new book Derek Jarman’s Sketchbooks which reveals the full scope of his working ideas and creative processes. Derek Jarman’s importance becomes ever clearer and his influence is growing amongst a generation that he sadly never met.

For more information please visit Almost Bliss: Notes on Derek Jarman’s Blue or here for CHELSEA Space.

Image credit: University of the Arts London

 

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