_DSC3348.jpg

Past exhibition

Keith Farquhar
Lap Gods

14 January - 17 February 2018
Office Baroque Jardin aux Fleurs, Brussels

Office Baroque is pleased to announce the second solo exhibition of Keith Farquhar at our downtown gallery on Bloemenhofplein 5 Place du Jardin aux Fleurs.

Colour co-ordinated and purchased readymade online, Keith Farquhar’s Lap Gods schematise present day conditions of social disenfranchisement, dispassionately rendering it as a visual equation. They reflect the obscenity of contemporary welfare practices at the same time as reflexively addressing issues of artistic agency and the institutional structures in which artworks currently circulate as objects. These pieces share a founding logic with earlier works by Farquhar that repurposed clothing commonly associated with subcultural groups, such as the ‘hoodies’ vilified by right-wing British media. Likewise, they display an affinity with a more recent body of work on corrugated steel panelling, several of which were exhibited as part of Farquhar’s first solo exhibition with the gallery in 2015. In these works low resolution images appropriated from a range of sources, including the spray-painted gestures of Christopher Wool, are conflated in such a way as to problematise the boundaries between hierarchical categories such as the ‘web,’ the ‘gallery’ and the ‘street.’

The artist’s own term for the restricted vocabulary of elements adopted in his Lap Gods series is that of an ‘economy.’ In these circumstances the meaning of his phrasing is twofold, in that what is formally economical about these works –a tripartite arrangement of sleeping bag, coffee cup and mechanically breathing toy dog– can obviously also be interpreted in relation to a range of global economic factors. Here, brands such as Greggs, Café Nero and Starbucks act as stand-ins for the cultural dynamic of a UK high street, post Brexit. The plush lap-dogs are arguably a specific nod to Farquhar’s native Edinburgh: an urban environment where the mechanics of social exclusion act in tandem with a highly sentimentalised, heritage-oriented worldview.

Farquhar is himself fond of the analogy between his arrangements and Kazimir Malevich’s Peasant paintings of the late 1920s and early 1930s. Produced after Malevich had abandoned non-objective abstraction in favour of an idealised figuration, these paintings depict proletarian figures as distillations of geometric elements. As images painted in an era of nascent Stalinism their political ambiguity borders on the profound.

This is not to say that Farquhar’s works are socially engaged in any genuine sense of the word; although a sense of indignation, dismay or resignation may not be an altogether unwelcome by-product of the effect they produce. Presented with a similarly callous logic to that which neo-liberal society regards those unfortunate enough to fall outside its protective care, what the Lap Gods re-enact is a transactional system in which we are all, merely by being present, automatically implicated. By casting the artist as a supplicant, a figure with little agency of their own, what they articulate is a system of relations at play within the gallery just as much as in the world at large: a system that is equally well equipped to instrumentalise our contempt, our passivity, and our desires.

Text by Neil Clements.

Installation view Keith Farquhar: Lap Gods, Office Baroque Jardin aux Fleurs, Brussels, 2018 Photo: Isabelle Arthuis

Installation view Keith Farquhar: Lap Gods, Office Baroque Jardin aux Fleurs, Brussels, 2018
Photo: Isabelle Arthuis

Installation view Keith Farquhar: Lap Gods, Office Baroque Jardin aux Fleurs, Brussels, 2018 Photo: Isabelle Arthuis

Installation view Keith Farquhar: Lap Gods, Office Baroque Jardin aux Fleurs, Brussels, 2018
Photo: Isabelle Arthuis

Keith Farquhar, Untitled (LAP GOD), 2014, U.V. direct print on corrugated, galvanised steel, 304,8 × 213,4 cm (120 × 84 in.)

Keith Farquhar, Untitled (LAP GOD), 2014, U.V. direct print on corrugated, galvanised steel, 304,8 × 213,4 cm (120 × 84 in.)

Installation view Keith Farquhar: Lap Gods, Office Baroque Jardin aux Fleurs, Brussels, 2018 Photo: Isabelle Arthuis

Installation view Keith Farquhar: Lap Gods, Office Baroque Jardin aux Fleurs, Brussels, 2018
Photo: Isabelle Arthuis

Keith Farquhar, Lap God (Subway), 2018, Nylon sleeping bag, toy dog, branded coffee cup, 184 × 100 × 35 cm (72 3/8 × 39 1/4 × 13 3/4 in.)

Keith Farquhar, Lap God (Subway), 2018, Nylon sleeping bag, toy dog, branded coffee cup, 184 × 100 × 35 cm (72 3/8 × 39 1/4 × 13 3/4 in.)

About Keith Farquhar

Artist page

Keith Farquhar graduated from Goldsmiths College with an MFA in 1996. He currently lives and works in Edinburgh, Scotland.
His work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at High Art, Paris; Leslie Fritz, New York; New Jerseyy, Basel; Hotel, London; Galerie Neu, Berlin; Tramway, Glasgow and Studio Voltaire, London. His work has appeared in group exhibitions at Witte de With, Rotterdam; ICA, London; The Box, Los Angeles; Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh; Kunsthalle Fribourg, Fribourg and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Bordeaux.