top of page

AUTONOMY

Martin J Tickner, Sean McLusky, Martin Bell, Wai Hung Young and LONDONEWCASTLE introduce Autonomy the inaugural exhibition at GALLERY46 LN

Artists

Gavin Bennett, Shaun Caton, Kelly-Anne Davitt, Benoît Delhomme, Dave Dorrell, Sean Dower, Mark Eley & Jon Whitbread, Barry Flanagan, Paul Fryer, Seulgi Kang, Robert Montgomery, Polly Morgan, Tim Noble & Sue Webster, Noki, Vesna Petresin, Warren Du Preez & Nick Thornton Jones, Jonathan Reding, Derrick Santini, Martin Sexton, Will Sweeney, Nick Waplington and Brian Wilkins

"A basic theme for the anarch is how man, left to his own devices, can defy superior forces – whether state, society, or the elements – by making use of their rules without submitting to them.

‘It is strange,’ Sir William Parry wrote when describing the igloos on Winter Island, ‘it is strange to think that all these measure are taken against the cold – and in houses of ice.” Ernst Jünger, Eumeswil (1977)

Autonomy finds its roots in the Greek autonomia ‘independent, living by one’s own laws’. An acute description of the artists included in this opening show and for the gallery itself as a venture. As the title infers and the curation of the exhibition reflects, Autonomy embraces change as a constant along with self-determination and the absenting of ties to a greater whole.

The new space, established through the partnership of Martin J Tickner and Sean McLusky and Fruitmachine founders, Martin Bell & Wai Hung Young breaks fresh ground for the open-source, non-conformist curatorial approach Tickner and McLusky employed at their (rightly) notorious MEN Gallery, in Shoreditch.

Whitechapel has long been the centre of the radical and independent in London: perhaps a free mindset is the result of something entwined in the ‘east end’. It was here on the edge of the City of London that Marx and Engels researched their theories and close by GALLERY 46, Vladimir Lenin led rallies during his pre-Russian revolution exile. Charlotte Wilson and Peter Kropotkin’s anarchist publishing house, Freedom Press, still operates locally.

Perhaps it is unsurprising that Shoreditch and Whitechapel’s history of migration, flux and revolution is also mirrored in the opening of a new gallery here, signifying as it does arrival, departure and evolution for Tickner, McLusky, Bell & Young. Housed in a pair of newly renovated Georgian houses in the grounds of Whitechapel Hospital, GALLERY 46 is set over 3 floors and 8 rooms and is a kaleidoscopic addition to Whitechapel’s burgeoning gallery scene and close by its artistic heart, the Whitechapel Gallery.

Autonomy, opening 7th September 2016, offers a review of the creative divergence that was established at MEN Gallery wed to works newly commissioned for this exhibition featuring over a dozen artists and including pieces from Polly Morgan, Paul Fryer, Derrick Santini, Tim Noble & Sue Webster, Robert Montgomery, Sean Dower, Nick Waplington and Kelly-Anne Davitt..

With a sharpened focus on the independent spirit of this multi-disciplinary group, connected by little more than a desire to re-enchant art away from an increasingly clunking and industrialised circuit and who continue to overthrow received truths in the genesis and execution of their work, Autonomy reveals the future contours of Whitechapel’s evergreen spirit of insurrection.

 

bottom of page