Victoria Miro : 16 : Christian Holstad - american standard - 6 Feb 2009 to 14 Mar 2009

Current Exhibition


6 Feb 2009 to 14 Mar 2009
Hours : Tuesday - Saturday 10.00am - 6.00pm
Victoria Miro Gallery
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Christian Holstad
Shrimp Buffet Array Tray Before and Shrimp Buffet Array Tray After, 2008
Courtesy of the artist and Victoria Miro Gallery
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Artists in this exhibition: Christian Holstad


Christian Holstad american standard
6 February to 14 March 2009


Victoria Miro announces the second solo exhibition in the UK by American artist Christian Holstad, whose distinctive practice encompasses large-scale installations, performances, labour-intensive collage and hand-made textiles. american standard will comprise a number of new sculptural works, as well as a new body of drawings from Holstad's ongoing 'eraserhead' series.

Taking its name from a global manufacturer of toilets, american standard presents a group of works that reflect on communal experience and activity, transforming everyday, recognisable objects into unexpected, often politically-charged commentaries on contemporary life. Encounters with such diverse environments as street corners, cocktail-parties and public toilets are implicated in various works, all of which are rendered as soft-sculptural forms. In one installation, two silver platters display elaborate party hors d'oeuvres, one half-devoured, the other with its shrimp cocktail still perfectly intact. Gathered round, a group of snake-like 'figures' pose as the indulgent, glamorously dressed partygoers. A signature motif of the artist, the snake form recurs in several works in the exhibition. In a large wall hanging, long serpentine fabric elements are inter-woven to depict an imagined confrontation that has taken place at the corner of Kingsland Road and Old Street in East London. Within the work are clues to the incident - a supermarket trolley, discarded groceries and a motorbike - representing the collision of ideals and the erosion of identity in this increasingly gentrified area.

In the upper gallery, Holstad has installed a number of freestanding urinals fashioned from pristine white towels, combining techniques of embroidery, unweaving and a modern adaptation of Victorian stumpwork. Stitched into the towels as though tossed into the receptacle are images of detritus common to wider society - cigarette butts, french fries, condom wrappers. In direct reference to the title of the exhibition, the artist playfully suggests that although America may have set a (societal and political) standard, that standard is perhaps not what it seems.

In the main gallery, alongside a soft sculpture of a stand of velvet ropes, Holstad will exhibit new 'eraserhead' works (1996-ongoing), so-called for method the artist has developed by taking clippings from newspapers and erasing and redrawing elements of the image. These works for the first time introduce an additional component - pastel drawings of pale blue Wedgwood china - that suggests a particular idea of class and status, as they offer a surreal commentary on politics, society and the deflation of power.

Throughout this show lies an investigation of 'high and low' in all its guises, and how this paradigm is employed to describe culture, class, society, and urban space. Not least significant is Holstad's use of craft techniques and materials - often relegated to the realm of 'low' art - to invert preconceptions about acceptable behaviours and practices. Who sets the standard?

Christian Holstad was born in Anaheim, California in 1972 and lives and works in New York. Holstad's work has been presented at the Yokohama Triennale 3, Yokohama, Japan, 2008; Unmonumental, New Museum, New York, 2007; Biennale de Lyon, Lyon, France, 2007, Moscow Biennial of Contemporary Art, Moscow, 2007; Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami, 2006 (solo); Uncertain States of America, Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo, 2005; Greater New York, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York, 2005; The Whitney Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, 2004; and Kunstahalle Zurich, Switzerland, 2004 (solo).