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Hannah Black at Arcadia Missa

Artist: Hannah Black

Exhibition title: Ruin/Rien

Venue: Arcadia Missa, London, UK

Date: February 29 – April 22, 2020

Photography: all images copyright and courtesy of the artist, Arcadia Missa and Company

Ruin/Rien links together a cluster of events associated with the French Revolution in the late 18th century and the concept of the autonomous artwork.

On the day of the storming of the Bastille, King Louis XVI wrote a single word in his diary: “rien” (nothing). This has been interpreted as a sign of the aristocracy’s disconnect from the activities of the proletariat. But it is more likely to have been simply a reference to the day’s hunt, in which the king killed nothing. The word “RIEN” appears here as a six-foot painting based on Ed Ruscha’s famous painting Oof.Ruscha was part of a movement of artists who played at the boundary of two ideas: that art draws its power from a kind of semantic emptiness, and that this emptiness itself characterizes everyday urban life.

During the storming of the Bastille, a protestor found and rescued a manuscript tucked into the walls of a prison cell. This was the work of a recent inhabitant, the Marquis de Sade, who had been moved from the Bastille just 10 days previously. ​Bastille playfully reconstructs this anecdote in brick and paper, blocking out part of the outside world and evoking both the autonomy of minimalist sculpture and the prison cell.

De Sade was a scion of the aristocracy but was sprung from his class position by his perverse sexual desires. A facing work, ​The Ruler,repurposes the cover of a famous heterosexual dating manual offering “capture”, gesturing to how, just as much as some desires can dislodge us from social norms, others can fuse us more closely to them.

Recent protests around art institutions have experimented in making art accountable to its subject matter, and illustrating how the forms of financial valorization that take place in art echo wider social structures. These protests have inspired various defenses of the inviolability of the artwork and the autonomy of art from the social. The text of the video ​Ruin Iis a fragment taken from a longer reflection by the artist on her experience of one such controversy. A partnering work, ​Ruin II,is simply a copy of CLR James’s seminal work The Black Jacobins labelled with a post-it. On dramatically different levels (the Haitian Revolution began modernity, whereas recent art controversies have simply marked a minor new era in cultural production), both works gesture to how, when social critique is articulated through blackness, it is received by the liberal mainstream as if threatens total destruction.

-HB, in the third person

Hannah Black, Ruin/Rien, 2020, exhibition view, Arcadia Missa, London

Hannah Black, Ruin/Rien, 2020, exhibition view, Arcadia Missa, London

Hannah Black, Ruin/Rien, 2020, exhibition view, Arcadia Missa, London

Hannah Black, Ruin I, 2020, HD video, 4 minutes, 1 second

Hannah Black, Ruin/Rien, 2020, exhibition view, Arcadia Missa, London

Hannah Black, Bastille, 2020, Bricks, pages from The 120 Days of Sodom by Marquis de Sade, 1785, Dimensions variable

Hannah Black, Bastille, 2020, Bricks, pages from The 120 Days of Sodom by Marquis de Sade, 1785, Dimensions variable

Hannah Black, The Hunt I, 2020, Three fake deer antlers, pages from: Oral history interview with Ed Ruscha, 1980 October 29 – 1981 October 2 for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution; Wikipedia page on Marquis de Sade; blog post on Louis XVI, the Royal Hunt and Bastille Day, Dimensions approximate: 102 × 25 × 20 cm (40 1/8 × 9 7/8 × 7 7/8 inches)

Hannah Black, Oof, 2020, Oil on canvas, 180 × 170 cm (70 7/8 × 66 7/8 inches)

Hannah Black, The Hunt II, 2020, Fake sheepskin, framed photograph, googly eyes, Dimensions approximate: 186 × 64 × 37 cm (73 1/4 × 25 1/4 × 14 5/8 inches)

Hannah Black, The Ruler, 2020, Framed book cover, pen, 34.5 × 28 × 3 cm (13 5/8 × 11 × 1 1/8 inches)

Hannah Black, Ruin II, 2020, Paperback copy of The Black Jacobins by C. L. R. James, 1938, post-it note, pastel, plinth, Plinth: 90 × 45 × 35 cm (35 3/8 × 17 3/4 × 13 3/4 inches) Book: 26 × 20 × 2 cm (10 1/4 × 7 7/8 × 3/4 inches)

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