MEDIA RELEASE
28 Sep 2016

Gerard Byrne: A late evening in the future

July, 2016

Gerard Byrne, A thing is a hole in a thing it is not, 2010, film installation. Courtesy the artist and Lisson Gallery, London

Presented by ACCA in association with Melbourne Festival
Gerard Byrne: A late evening in the future

In Samuel Beckett’s one-act play Krapp’s Last Tape, the curtain rises to the mise-en-scène: ‘a late evening in the future’. For his exhibition of the same name, Irish artist Gerard Byrne employs a similar sense of drama: transforming ACCA into a theatre, and implicating the audience within an intricate, multi-sensory network of lights, flickering TV monitors, video projections and architectural structures.

In the case of Beckett’s character Krapp, the ‘tape’ in the play’s title refers to audio recordings made by the protagonist as a younger man. In this first scene he is revealed listening over them and adding new commentary to reflect on recent years.

Byrne’s exhibition pays homage to this history of recordings, bringing together a dense accumulation of his own video works spanning more than fifteen years.

Throughout his varied practice, Byrne has explored historical ideas, conversations and sites in order to consider their contemporary relevance and to blur distinctions between past and future, myth and reality. The first major survey of the artist’s work in Australia, Gerard Byrne: A late evening in the future builds on this interest in collective history and dramatic reconstruction, employing the device of a playback system to convulsively shuttle and scroll through moments of memory and cultural amnesia.

Byrne’s work is characterised by a laconic humour. His projects examine the ambiguities of language and of what is gained or lost in the translation from text to image. By reconstructing historically charged conversations, interviews and performances, from sources as diverse as La Revolution Surréaliste or Playboy and National Geographic magazines, Byrne tests our perception of the past and the present, and the inherent challenges of the visual record.

Gerard Byrne: A late evening in the future offers audiences the chance to review Byrne’s extensive body of work, which, while conceived independently, resonates together as if made in relation to a specific, but malleable historical referent.

A new commission by Gerard Byrne will also be presented at the same time by Monash University Museum of Art I MUMA. Co-commissioned by MUMA, Mead Gallery, Warwick University, and Moderna Museet, Stockholm this new work – Jielemeguvvie guvvie sjisjnjeli – is the centre of the group exhibition Life inside an Image which considers the museum as an image-capturing technology. The exhibitions runs 1 October – 10 December 2016. See https://www.monash.edu/muma for more information.

Born in Dublin in 1969, Gerard Byrne represented Ireland in the 2007 Venice Biennale, and has had major presentations at international biennials including Gwangju and Sydney in 2008, Lyon in 2007, the Tate Triennial in 2006, and the Istanbul Biennale in 2003. Solo exhibitions of his work have been presented at the ICA Boston and the Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen (both 2008), Dusseldorf Kunstverein, the Charles H. Scott Gallery, Vancouver (2007), the Frankfurter Kunstverein (2003) and at the Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin (2002). In 2006 he was a recipient of the Paul Hamlyn award. He is represented in London by Lisson Gallery and in Stockholm by Galerie Nordenhake.

Gerard Byrne: A late evening in the future
8 October – 27 November 2016

Australian Centre for Contemporary Art
111 Sturt Street, Southbank VIC 3006, Australia
10am – 5pm Tuesday to Friday;
11am – 5pm weekends and public holidays
Monday by appointment.
Admission: Free

Tel: 03 9697 9999
www.accaonline.org.au

 
ACCA is supported by the Visual Arts and Craft Strategy, an initiative of the Australian, State and Territory Governments.
 
For further media information:
Katrina Hall 0421153046 or kathall@ozemail.com.au