The Meaning of Life
February 11–April 10, 2022
Hannah Black’s exhibition The Meaning of Life presents a new body of work centered around looting.
The exhibition revolves around a video based on long interviews with three young women present during an incident of looting, an ecstatic collective moment. “This is the meaning of life,” one performer concludes. Black understands looting to be a direct abolition of the commodity form, a temporary suspension of the domination of capital. She is interested in how commerce dominates the city landscape and forms a kind of second nature to which looting reacts.
However, the works in the show are contorted around the law: the video images of the performers are blurred out and specific names and places are cut to avoid police surveillance, and logos are missing from sculptural works. The law is a formal device shaping the artworks, like an Oulipian aesthetic constraint.
Another video, positioned secondarily behind the first, contrasts the erotics of rupture with attempts to give moments of uprising a more stable political meaning. This consists of an interview with two political organizers on attempts to fuse the intensity of riot with the measured language of policy. The first video attempts to capture the sensory and emotional clarity of looting and is disfigured in the attempt. In the second, faces remain legible, but the problem of history does not necessarily do the same.
The two videos in the exhibition reflect Black’s ongoing practice of using an intuitive, fragmentary writing/editing strategy to highlight the improvised poetry of conversation. The relation between the two videos, along with the objects displayed alongside them, attempts to express the gap between the complex mediations of politics, the law, and the chaotic image of immediate abolition given by looting. In the exhibition as in life, sometimes these two registers miss each other entirely and sometimes they converge, though always overshadowed by capital.
Working outwards from ecstatic recollections of shattered storefront windows, the exhibition reflects on the stubborn resilience of the commodity form (i.e. the structure of domination and exploitation in which we all differently live) and, equally, of resistance to it.
Also on view at the AGYU is a selection of Black’s video work that uses the interview as a basic format and formal process. The Meaning of Life is commissioned by the AGYU and marks Hannah Black’s first solo exhibition in Canada. It is curated by Jenifer Papararo, AGYU Director/Curator.
Hannah Black works across mediums from video to performance, most recently exhibiting Wheel of Fortune at gtaExhibitions, Zurich, Switzerland (2021); Beginning, End, None at ORG Project (2020); and Dede, Eberhard, Phantom at Kunstverein Braunschweig Germany (2019). She has exhibited widely, presenting work at Performance Space, New York (2019); Eden Eden, Berlin (2018); Centre d'Art Contemporain, Geneva (2018); Chisenhale Gallery, London (2017); mumok, Vienna (2017); and New Museum, New York (2016). She has published widely, including in Artforum, Texte zur Kunst, Tank, Harpers, 4 Columns, and The New Inquiry. She is the author of Life (2017), which she co-wrote with performance artist Juliana Huxtable, and Dark Pool Party (2015), an auto-fictional collection of poems and texts. In 2022, Capricious Publishing released her novella, Tuesday or September or the End. She is represented by Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin, and Arcadia Missa, London.
We would like to give special thanks to the artist Hannah Black for this first presentation of her new body of work The Meaning of Life, and acknowledge the support of Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin.
We acknowledge the key work of Samuli Haavisto who was on camera and sound for the video elements of the exhibition, and Natália Rebelo, for studio support. The exhibition is presented with the production support of Clara Halpern, assistant curator, AGYU, and Carmen Schroeder, Robert Ross, Micah Adams, Curtis Amisich, and Corrine Carlson on installation. Audio visual technical support by Jeremy Mimnagh. Poster concept and design by Mark Bennett, research support by Shadio Hussein.
Art Gallery of York University
Accolade East Building at York University
4700 Keele Street
Toronto Ontario M3J 1P3
Canada
Hours: Monday–Sunday 12–5pm
For press inquiries, please contact Michael Maranda, assistant curator, publishing:
mmarand@yorku.ca