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Later Works is London-based artist Jack Jubb’s first solo exhibition in the UK, featuring a newly commissioned series of sculptures and watercolors. The exhibition ambivalently acts as a fever dream of a British modernist in their decadent era or, alternatively, a 3D-printing hobbyist compulsively producing counterfeits. In his debut in sculpture, the artist draws on this dual role, continuing his interest in themes of labor, reproduction, value, and mythmaking—this time through the lens of countercultural hobbyism and the legacy of British modernist sculpture.
Jack Jubb’s miniatures are their own chimeras. They are preparatory objects and final works, refusing to scale up. They riff on the forms of British modernist sculpture and its “later” works: Chadwick’s later works, Paolozzi’s later works, Moore’s later works, now Jubb’s later works. Belated in time, the value of later works steadily accrues as they become culturally displaced and, as public art, paradoxically aligned with the present. The normalised grotesque everyday has synced up to the grotesque of their initial mode of critique.
Employing “the miniature” as a device to interrogate the relationship between preparation and completion, scale and value, Jack Jubb uses a model-maker or gamer hobbyist’s toolkit and aesthetic language: a household-scale 3D printer, a tablet, modeling software, and stereolithography. His work suggests that models occupy a conceptual space where they are not merely prototypes or stand-ins. In the artist’s framing, the miniature discards the linear pathway between originals and derivatives, instead engaging in the quasi-antagonistic practice of counterfeiting. As counterfeits, they remain suspended, irreverent about someone’s or their own cultural legacy, value inscription mechanisms, and the mystique of the final work, all while nodding to the allure of those legacies and their own participation in these mechanisms.
Later Works inhabits the in-between: a future withheld, a past slightly awry, and a present that deceives. Displayed on table tennis tables sourced from Gumtree—a gallery and museum art handlers’ in-joke—the sculptures appear as they might in stockrooms full of small-scale modernist works, spaces to which Jubb may or may not have had close proximity. The exhibition performs as its final form and as a knock-off display in preparation. Suggesting a state of incompletion that will not be resolved, the miniatures and their supports seem poised for transformation that never arrives.
Even the agency in the “refusal to scale up” is under question. These “poor images in space,” produced from endlessly scalable digital maquettes, become sculptural echoes of infinitely reproducible files—degraded images of sculptures. They are marked by the limitations of consumer-grade 3D printing, tracing both the promise of democratized, accessible countercultural DIY spaces and their political failures. The latest peak in online ‘inauthenticity’ suggests it is prone to curation and amplification by state and corporate systems at will.
An examination of the mechanics of value, labor, and cultural legacy, Later Works embraces the grotesque and the small, offering a materially grounded reflection on what it means to produce and reproduce at this moment of digital and historical saturation.
Curator Adomas Narkevičius.
Jack Jubb lives and works in London. Recent solo and two-person exhibitions include Saturday Night Live, Edel Assanti, London, UK (2023); VEGAN, Spouse, Vienna, Austria (2023); Half-Life, Stems Gallery, Brussels, Belgium (2023); The Empath, Carl Kostyal, Milan, Italy (2022); and Viscous Cycle, The Residence Gallery, London, UK (2022). Selected group exhibitions include Encounters, Austrian Cultural Forum, London, UK (2024); RAW, Gallery Vacancy, Shanghai, China (2022); Works on Paper on Fridges, Harkawik Gallery, New York, US (2022); Memeplex, Seventeen Gallery, London, UK (2021); The future isn’t what it used to be, Moarain House (Rose Easton), London, UK (2021); and Halcyon on and on, Franz Kaka, Toronto, Canada (2021). Jubb holds a BA in Fine Art from Goldsmiths University, London, UK.
With support from the Foyle Foundation.