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Deconstructions
Jonny Briggs -
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Solo exhibitions include (Upcoming) Deconstructions, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London (2022); Knots, Burgh House and Hampstead Museum, London (2021-22); Economy of Errors, OHSH Projects, London (2021); Trying To Be A Square But Never Being A Square, Ncontemporary Milan (2021); Art Station Dubulti, Latvia, curated by Vineta Kaulaca and Inga Steimane (2019); Location/Dislocation. Between forgetting and remembering, The Mark Rothko Art Center, Latvia, Curated by Vineta Kaulaca (2019); Peer-to-Peer (Nominated by Brett Rogers), LOOK Biennial, Open Eye Gallery, Liverpool (2019); Peer-to-Peer, Shanghai Center of Photography, China (2019); Dad Jokes, Ncontemporary, Milan (2019); Photo 50: Who’s Looking at the Family Now? London Art Fair, curated by Tim Clark (2019); Format Festival, University of Derby, UK (2019); Da Uno a Diece, Ncontemporary, Milan (2018); Photoforum PasquArt Photo Museum, Switzerland (2017); DEAD, Saatchi Gallery, London (2015); Catlin Prize World Tour, (2015); Ancestral Home, Simon Oldfield Gallery, London (2013).
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Group exhibitions include Untitled Miami Beach, Art Fair, Miami, USA (2022); Photo London with Hi-Noon Editions, London, UK (2022); Uprising, Schloss Görne, Berlin, Germany (2022); Photo London with Hi-Noon Editions, London (2022); My London, Peckham24, Copeland Gallery, London (2018); Group Show: At Home She’s a Tourist, curated by Tom Lovelace, Copeland Gallery, London (2018); Two-person Show: The Manicured Wild, Evy Jokhova & Jonny Briggs, Kristin Hjellegjerde, London (2017); Group Show & Commission: From Selfie to Self-Expression, Saatchi Gallery (2017); This Is Not A Curated Exhibition, Galleria Ramo, Lugano, Switzerland (2017); When something bad happens more than once, it starts to feel normal, Ncontemporary (2016); Centre Photographique, Rouen, Normandy, France, Curated by Raphaëlle Stopin (2016); Soil Culture: Young Shoots, The Eden Project, Cornwall (2016); UK/RAINE art prize, Saatchi Gallery (2016); Enfances, Galerie d’YS, Brussels, Belgium (2015); To Eat With the Eyes, Cabin Gallery (2015); Ermanno Tedeschi Tel Aviv (2014); Foam Talent 2014, l’Atelier Néerlandais, Paris (2014); Facing the Wild – The Unknown, The Others Fair, Turin, curated by Emanuele Norsa and Andrea Scarso (2014).
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Briggs’ practice centres around a process of repetition in which he continually dredges up and deconstructs the past in order to make sense of and purge past traumas. He describes his relationship to the ‘family portrait’ as deeply suspicious, owing to performative and often misleading nature of the image. Growing up he found his role as the only son among four sisters to be heavily prescribed and later restrictive to the development of his own sense of self as a queer man. By recontextualising and fragmenting the family portraits that memorialise that time in his life, Briggs is able to reshape the dominant narrative that ran counter to his lived experience and find a sense of release.This is perhaps most obvious in the works titled Blink 1 and Blink 2 in which the archival image is barely visible, encased within multiple layers of black and white mount assembled in a striped, rectangular pattern. The photograph sits at the centre, offering, in each work, a partial view of a person’s face, almost as if they were peeping through a letter box. Briggs has punched a small hole in the figure’s only visible eye and through this hole, if you look very closely, you can glimpse Briggs’ own eye from where he has held the image to his face and rephotographed it. This not only creates a collision of time and space, but also sets up a complex tension between the act of looking and being seen that runs throughout many of the works in the exhibition. While the recurring motif of eyes are a direct reference to sight, the cuts that Briggs makes through the works also play on the idea of concealment and revelation – the white space is both an erasure and a site of possibility. In both Blink 1 and 2, for example, there is a line cut through the frame down to the centre of the image that simultaneously destroys the regularity of the composition and further obscures the figure, while also symbolically releasing the work from its strict structure. ‘My resistance to the frame comes from a childhood feeling of confinement in terms of gender, trying to find my place within the family and to live up to my father’s expectations,’ explains Briggs.
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In another work, comprising a portrait of two young boys, two horizontal lines have been cut out of each face extending from their eyes upwards, out of the top of their head. These cut out sections have then been stuck outside the frame of the image. Conceptually the idea of such physical mutilation – the gauging out of children’s eyes – is unbearably brutal, but the violence of the act is disguised by the formal aesthetic – the black and white colour palette and straight lines, which, as Briggs notes, bring to mind the strict tailoring of a traditional man’s suit. In many ways, it is a familiar story of brutal masculinity passing for the polite and respectable (or paternal), but rather than positioning himself as the victim, Briggs – as the artist – re-enacts the trauma. Through the symbolic mutilation of the image, he attempts to understand not just the impacts on the child (himself) but also the conditions which breed this kind of behaviour.‘All of us have experienced aspects of our lives where we have not been in control, but making art gives me agency, it allows me to externalise certain feelings and to find a way of moving forward,’ says Briggs. Importantly, this release is achieved not just through acts of violence, but also humour. In some works, Briggs’ body parts appear to point fun at the predictability of the portrait. In Point, for example, the artist’s finger intrudes on the formality of the archival photograph, extending down the centre of the figure’s forehead to the tip of a cut-out triangle shape. It appears almost as if the finger has magically made the space appear and is pointing playfully at its erasure while also revealing the artist’s power over the gaze: we see what he wants us to see, even if it’s nothing. Here, as in other works, Briggs might be performing for the image, but he is also the one creating it. In this way, he not only reclaims a sense of agency, but also puts forward a more sensitive approach to dealing with the past that asserts the importance of multiple perspectives.
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Enquire
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Jonny Briggs, Insight (artist's ear bursting through photo of their father), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Prism (my teeth underbiting photo of great-grandmother), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Slip (artist's eye looking through photo of his grandfather), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Blink 1 (cut photograph, rephotographed with my eye staring through), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Point (photograph of my great-grandfather, re-photographed with my finger), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Blink 2 (cut photograph, rephotographed with my eye staring through), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Contradiction 1 (artists' toe on black velvet), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Ties (photograph of great-grandfather re-photographed with my ear bursting through), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Contradiction 2 (artist's index finger on black velvet), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Distraction (artist's finger on black velvet), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Extramission hearing 2 (artist's ear bursting through print of his father), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Held (photo of artist's paternal grandmother held to wall by frame), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Lapel (artist's ear bursting through print of his paternal great grandfather), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Looking Beyond (cut photographs of artist's father and uncle, 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Photo-labyrinth 1 (artist holding photograph of their great grandmother to their own eye), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Photo-labyrinth 2 (artist holding photograph of their great grandmother to their own eye), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Retrospect (folded photograph of artist's paternal grandfather), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Smile (spoon holding photograph of artist's mother to ceiling), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Window (Ear in glass), 2022
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Jonny Briggs, Hearing Square (artist's ears bursting through photographs of his father), 2022
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Jonny briggs: Deconstructions
Past viewing_room