IKON

Yuri Leiderman

Birmingham Pattern

28 July – 16 September 2007

Ikon presented the first UK solo exhibition by Ukrainian artist Yuri Leiderman, a series of performative installations in which the artist dealt with legacies of history, cultural stereotyping and national identity.

For this exhibition, the figure of the artist was central as he sat in solemn silence, dressed absurdly as a Swiss naval captain, focusing on a round tin. His handmade, cartoon-like uniform acted as a foil for the seriousness of contemplated historical atrocities. Whilst he was lost in this isolated rumination, a cacophony of sound filled the space. Six groups of local musicians drawn from different cultural backgrounds performed throughout the gallery, presenting an ever evolving composition encapsulating their varying ‘folk’ traditions. Chinese lute and harp players, an English folk violinist, African drummers and an Albanian clarinet player, improvised together against backdrops of photographic assemblages. These montages featured various images from wartime, establishing a monochrome link to the live ‘here and now’, to ongoing issues arising out of assumptions of diversity and multiculturalism. Here, music was suggested as an artform with the potential to transcend borders; a communication open to influence, welcoming difference.

 

Thanks to all of the musicians:

Max Gittings - Flute, other ethnic flutes and winds

Bland Mahdi - Oud and tar

Blerim Bajrami - Clarinet

Miri Alibashi - Balalaika

Christakes Demetrios - Guitar
Ruth Angell - Violin
Roi Kwabena - Drum, percussion

Ahoefa Hales - Voice
Steve Yimga - Drum, percussion

Cheng Yu - Pipa

Li Ming - Erhu
Cheng-Ying Chuang - Liuqin, Zhongruan
Sanchita Pal - Sitar, harmonium, voice

 

Please download the exhibition guide for Birmingham Pattern.

Yuri Leidermann (PDF 25kb)

 

Birmingham Pattern was supported by The John Feeney Charitable Trust, the University of Central England Birmingham Conservatoire and Sound It Out. This exhibition was a collaboration with Centre d'Art Contemporain, Geneva.

Yuri Leiderman
Yuri Leiderman.
Anne Frank's father and mushrooms of consciousness expansion (Geopoetics -2), 2004
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Michel Rein, Paris.
Birmingham Pattern. Installation view Ikon Gallery 2007
 
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