Daadgalerie

James Richards

13 Sep - 25 Oct 2014

JAMES RICHARDS
Mercy Mercy Mercy
13 September - 25 October 2014

Mercy Mercy Mercy – Stuart Baker, 1988
Arcanum – Stuart Marshall, 1977
Amami Se Vuoi – Michael Curran, 1994
The Love Show. Part One – Stuart Marshall, 1980
Untitled (Chat Show Faces) – Chris Saunders, 1993
Onomato – Hank Linhart, 1979
Shake Daddy Shake – Julia Heyward, 1976
Still Life Animation – Stuart Marshall, 1977
The Waltons – Anne McGuire, 1996

For his video films James Richards helps himself to the abundance of existing sources that he finds on the Internet or on second-hand VHS cassettes from junk goods baskets, flea markets and estate sales. The collection of disparate video material that he has assembled in this way ranges from feature films. YouTube clips, and obscure B-movies, to other unexpected motifs. The video collages of James Richards reject conventional patterns of completeness or linearity and instead rely on the emotional pull of the suggestive power that develops as a result of the combination of images, music and language.

Mercy Mercy Mercy is not one of James Richards’ art works: it is a video program compiled and edited by the artist featuring works by mostly British pioneers of video art. Parallel to working on his own films, Richards draws inspiration from collaborations with other artists, his interactions with contemporary art and recent art history, and from curating film programs and exhibitions (most recently, the Alms for the Birds exhibition, Cabinet Gallery, London, 2014). His various activities thus become an essential part of his work and research process.

The screening Mercy Mercy Mercy brings together a selection of works that deploy deliveries of text, words, and various electronic and physical interruptions as material. The texts are often disturbed by their processes of embodiment and delivery and a kind of concentrated tension pervades.

The core of the program consists of the works by the pioneering English video artist, curator and theorist Stuart Marshall, a committed advocate of British video art and queer identity throughout the 1970s and 80s before passing away prematurely in 1993. His videos and writing were amongst the first to explore the relationship between video, television and other media, in both highly spare formal pieces and later more overtly political ones exploring the representation of people with AIDS in the media.

James Richards (b. 1983, Cardiff, UK) lives and works in London and Berlin. Recent solo exhibitions (a selection): Magician Space, Beijing, China; Cabinet Gallery, London, UK (both 2014); Rodeo, Istanbul, Turkey (2013); Center for Contemporary Art, Kitakyushu, Japan (2012); Chisenhale Gallery, London, UK (2011); and Art Now: Clunie Reid and James Richards, Tate Britain, London, UK (2010). Recent group exhibitions (a selection): The Encyclopedic Palace, 55th International Art Exhibition, Venice, Italy (2013); Otherwise Unexplained Fires, Malmo Konsthall, Malmö, Sweden (2013); Frozen Lakes, Artist Space, New York, USA (2013); Speculations On Anonymous Materials, Fridericianum, Kassel, Germany (2013); and Burning Down The House, 10th Gwangju Bienniale, Gwangju, Korea (2014). Richards received the Jarman Award in 2012 and the ars viva Prize in 2014/15, and has been nominated for the 2014 British Turner Prize. Richards was a guest at the DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Program in 2013.
 

Tags: Clunie Reid, James Richards