Open: Tue-Sat 10am-6pm

508 West 24th Street, NY 10011, New York, United States
Open: Tue-Sat 10am-6pm


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Tony Cragg: Riot

Lisson Gallery, New York

Tue 14 Mar 2023 to Sat 15 Apr 2023

508 West 24th Street, NY 10011 Tony Cragg: Riot

Tue-Sat 10am-6pm

Artist: Tony Cragg

Lisson Gallery presents the seminal 1987 work, Riot, by British sculptor, Tony Cragg. Comprising found, discarded plastic objects, this large-scale wall relief, is readable as a response to the political and social turbulence of the 1980s in Britain and is considered as one of his most acclaimed works. Despite its initial historic specificity, the work is simultaneously comprehensible as a current reflection of our own fraught context. Alongside this work are two further installations – Policeman (1981) and Leaf (1981) – that similarly address this unrest as well as our paradoxical relationship with nature.

Assembled from a multitude of meticulously positioned plastic objects, which span the entire width of the gallery wall, Riot conveys a barricade of police officers wearing special protective gear. Following Cragg’s enduring interest in the dynamic power of matter to assume form, the wall work figuratively foregrounds a scene of militarized state power, alluding to the many social upheavals that arose in reaction to the conservative Thatcherite regime in 1980s Britain.

Considering Riot’s monumental scale, the work is evocative of Parthenon Friezes, playing on traditions of spatial engagement with relief composition and narrative-led portrayals of imperial warfare and societal collapse. These art historical nods simultaneously position Riot with a view towards the past while make striking connections with our present context of rising authoritarianism and police repression. An early example of the artist’s studied interrogation of industrial materials, Cragg uses the vivid colors and unaltered forms of disparate plastic objects to materialize a sensorially immersive and dynamic image-sculpture.

Policeman, 1981, similarly echoes the volatile political conditions under which the work was made in its depiction of a singular police officer that towers over the viewer. Composed of a mélange of blue plastic objects, the work unpacks the color blue and its loaded symbolic associations with two interconnected institutions of societal repression during this period, the Metropolitan Police and the Conservative Party. Leaf, 1981, underscores Cragg’s interest in exploring humans’ relationships with their material environments. A commentary on the rapid accumulation of man-made materials (especially plastic) in industrialized economies, Cragg substitutes pointed ecological critique with playful humor by forming a leaf – a charged symbol of organic purity – out of green plastic objects. The artist explains that his preference for man-made materials arose out of a desire to confront viewers with their overlooked yet deeply intimate quotidian relationships with such objects. The paradoxical form of Leaf further probes viewers to question what separates the natural from the unnatural.

Taken together, these three works give important historical context to an artist who has gone on to become one of the world’s foremost sculptors. Though the works are reflective of the socio-political context of 1980s Britain, their poetic allusions to civil unrest and industrial pollution could not be more contemporary.

A new essay by Dr. Jon Wood, curator and art historian who has written extensively on modern and contemporary sculpture, accompanies the exhibition. Dr. Wood previously published a major essay entitled "Strata, structures, stories: Stacking in Cragg's sculpture" in the career-spanning publication, Tony Cragg: Stacks.

all images © the gallery and the artist(s)

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