Through
performance, video and painting Kate Hawkins produces work that confronts
popular ideas of conformity and dissent, exploring the fallacies and idiosyncrasies
of the social rituals, manners and mores that govern contemporary
relationships.
The titular video work, Anarchy is Ordinary (2008), considers how ideas of dissent have
become entrenched within contemporary society. Hawkins proposes that opposition
has come to exist merely for its own sake; leached of meaning it has become
alarmingly habitual, failing to confront or shock. Anarchy is Ordinary asks important questions about how opposition
can continue to function when traditional forms of rebellion have been
homogenised and dissent is spoken of as though devoid of historical context.
Also included within the exhibition are a series
of paintings which look to Mrs Beeton's aspirational napkin folding
illustrations (Mrs Beeton's Book of
Household Management, 1923) and modern twentieth century formal abstraction. On the
surface, the napkin paintings appear as abstract forms liberated from
dependence on the figure and the object, suggesting autonomy from the specific contexts that condition their making. However their
autonomous appearance belies the strong rules of etiquette - as prescribed by
Mrs Beeton's handbook - that govern their production. Though the paintings are
reliant on an understanding of the conventions of dinner etiquette, they
also seek, through playful imitation, to draw attention to the pettiness of
such polite social rituals. In demonstrating that our desire to escape
restrictive conventions is explored within the context of the very conservatism
we seek to reject, Hawkins articulates the inherent
paradox of individual expression.
On the opening night of the exhibition Kate Hawkins together
with Eloise Fornieles will perform the piece You're too Kind. The performance takes the form of a series of
successive compliments based loosely on the Persian custom Taarof. A verbal dance between the two protagonists
will be played out in which they each attempt to outdo each other with an
increasingly ornamented script of compliments.
Kate Hawkins is a graduate of the University of Edinburgh
and the Slade School of Fine Art. Solo
shows include Harpies & Queens, Ritter/Zamet, London
(2007). In addition her work has been
exhibited widely in a number of group shows, both in Britain and a abroad. These include Two Sidedness, CultureHouse, Stockholm (2008), 2(007)
Pranvere,
National Gallery, Tirana, Albania, Zelda Rubenstein, Paradise Row, London (2007), Drawn Apart East, Contemporary Art Projects, London
(2007), Intimate Experiences, BISCHOFF/WEISS, London (2006) and Goods to Declare/MFA International, Tel Aviv, Israel (2006). The artist has also been awarded grants from
the I-MYU Projects/Arts
Council Korea (2007) and the British Arts Council, MFA International Travel
Fund (2006).
Text Courtesy Bischoff/Weiss London