Lou Hubbard and Alexis Hunter: An Emergency Exit Sealed Shut

Lou Hubbard and Alexis Hunter: An Emergency Exit Sealed Shut

Kunstverein

Lou Hubbard, Drill, 2008. Single-channel video, 11 minutes.

April 18, 2023
Lou Hubbard and Alexis Hunter
An Emergency Exit Sealed Shut
April 22–June 3, 2023
Opening: April 21, 6–9pm
Kunstverein
Pieter Baststraat 35H
1071 TV Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Hours: Wednesday–Saturday 1–6pm

office@kunstverein.nl
kunstverein.nl
Instagram

This exhibition begins with a plot twist: an emergency exit, sealed shut. In the first instance, a crisis. Fashioned as a safety measure, the emergency exit should be able to be relied upon, the last resort and a first port of call wrapped up in one. But when that falters, when the structure supposedly there for your protection fails you and there is no possibility of escape, what next?

Taunt the structure, said New Zealand artist Alexis Hunter (1948–2014), whose work spanning photography, painting and organising was a key contribution to the feminist art movement of Britain in the 1970s. On show at Kunstverein is a collection of her “narrative photo sequences” made between 1974 and 1978, produced in Hunter’s quintessentially serial fashion. In each individual series, she serves up objects of patriarchal oppression and their accompanying contexts on a photographic platter, storyboarding her fornication with mechanical instruments, bulging crotches and domesticity as a way to subvert the dominant narrative of the male gaze, instead writing her own path to independence and sexual expression.

Due to the overtly feminist nature of Hunter’s work, it didn’t get the exposure it deserved at its time of making. This is evidenced by an incident in 1978, when a group of male museum workers busy with unpacking her works in Belfast objected so strongly to their content that they were withdrawn from the exhibition. Nor did she receive the professionalism she demanded, a request insisted upon through how she arranged her practice, working two days a week on “creative explosions” and managing everything else around them the other five, steadfastly intent on establishing herself and the work of other women artists, her advertising background put to use in full force. 

Twenty-eight years later we meet Lou Hubbard (1957–), an Australian photographer and sculptor pushing at the integrity of structures through often eerie sculptural configurations and processes, sometimes recorded on film. From surgically operating on marshmallow eyeballs with dexterous precision to working en masse with comically inflatable (and therefore defunct) walking frames, Hubbard’s odd, often playfully violent approach to sculpting is as much about the narrative absurdism of expectation and preconception as it is about an almost mundane trialling and testing of the durability of materials.

While Hubbard and Hunter coincidentally have many things in common—long periods teaching countless students at art academies, a background in commercial photography and film, a keen sense of humour, a narrative impulse, an investigation into the body’s relation to and with standardising structures and, though less overtly in the work of Hubbard, the formative context of Antipodean feminist thought—what sits central to this story is their shared enquiry into the submission of materials and structures when force is applied. For Hunter this was an unyielding reckoning with a stifling political order, for Hubbard this is a sculptural and linguistic exercise geared towards interrogating conditions of control. For both, in these narrative arcs and plot twists from the status quo, the material generated speaks for itself: resistance is waged in the fullest, sealed doors will be pushed open with force. 

Kunstverein would like to thank the artists; Althea Greenan and the Women’s Art Library at Goldsmiths University, London; Sarah Scout Presents, Melbourne; and Richard Saltoun Gallery, London. We would also like to thank our members and Amsterdam Fonds voor de Kunst for their continued support as well as VCA Art Dialogues for their project specific contribution.

Further announcements
Kunstverein Publishing will participate in Libros Mutantes from April 28–30, 2023. The book fair will take place at La Casa Encendida, Madrid. 

To stay in the loop about our program, our movements, our puns and our punchlines, please sign up for our newsletter

Advertisement
Map
RSVP
RSVP for Lou Hubbard and Alexis Hunter: An Emergency Exit Sealed Shut
Kunstverein
April 18, 2023

Thank you for your RSVP.

Kunstverein will be in touch.

Subscribe

e-flux announcements are emailed press releases for art exhibitions from all over the world.

Agenda delivers news from galleries, art spaces, and publications, while Criticism publishes reviews of exhibitions and books.

Architecture announcements cover current architecture and design projects, symposia, exhibitions, and publications from all over the world.

Film announcements are newsletters about screenings, film festivals, and exhibitions of moving image.

Education announces academic employment opportunities, calls for applications, symposia, publications, exhibitions, and educational programs.

Sign up to receive information about events organized by e-flux at e-flux Screening Room, Bar Laika, or elsewhere.

I have read e-flux’s privacy policy and agree that e-flux may send me announcements to the email address entered above and that my data will be processed for this purpose in accordance with e-flux’s privacy policy*

Thank you for your interest in e-flux. Check your inbox to confirm your subscription.