The Economist Plaza
25 St. James's Street
nearest tube: Green Park or Piccadilly Circus
SW1A 1HG
London
United Kingdom
Europe
p: +44 020 7831 1243
m:
f:
w: www.contempart.org.uk
Private View Thursday 19 February 2008 18.30 — 20.30
The contemporary art society and The Economist Group are pleased to present ‘Mimetes Anon’ at the Economist Plaza.
Who is watching who in Alastair Mackie’s first major outdoor sculpture commission?
At first glance, the Economist Plaza appears empty – the usual centrally positioned sculpture absent. But scanning the perimeter a lone figure is seen to be lurking amongst the passing crowd. To our surprise - or perhaps more to his - a fully grown male chimpanzee is perched ominously upon the southern railing of the space. The chimpanzee is more closely related genetically to humans than to gorillas or other apes, and here we find our closest living cousin sitting within the fabric of this busy urban plaza, quite inconspicuously but resolutely staring back at us.
An awkward and unexpected standoff with our animal past, Mimetes Anon is a meticulously cast bronze chimpanzee with a photo-realist surface. As if from a scene in an apocalyptic science fiction movie, its appearance in the Plaza alsoserves as a reminder of what might have been if the great evolutionary leap forward never happened. The title refers to a synonym for the chimpanzee originated in the 1820’s (mimetes – from the Greek word meaning 'to imitate'. Anon - at an unspecified future time).
Mackie’s sculptures often address the lack of progress in contemporary society and the destructive ways we forge ahead into the future without learning from past mistakes. If the development of agriculture marks the advent of human civilization, then today, culture, science, government, and economic expansion are the benchmarks we use to measure the progress of civilisation. More than ever at this moment in time, as world population burgeons to almost seven billion people, we are forced to rethink the state of the human condition in relation to our environment. By remembering the past and imagining the future, we begin to question whether our obsession with progress is in fact leading us in the right direction. Mimetes Anon triggers our awareness and interrogates our convictions about the uneasy boundaries that separate modern man and the natural world that we inhabit.
Alastair Mackie will concurrently be exhibiting his second solo exhibition in London "Not Waving but Drowning" at The David Roberts Foundation Fitzrovia, 111 Great Titchfield St, London, W1W 6RY, 16 January - 28 March 2009
Alastair has exhibited widely both in the UK and abroad including solo shows at Mark Moore Gallery LA, and Max Wigram Projects. Group shows include ARTfutures and New Blood at the Saatchi Gallery. His works are in collections including the Saatchi Collection, Damien Hirst's Murderme Collection, and the Wellcome Collection. He lives and works in London and is represented by All Visual Arts.