John Latham

THE LISSON GALLERY DOES NOT EXIST FOR 100 YEARS.

May 5 - June 5, 2010

Press Release

Forty years on from John Latham's first solo exhibition at Lisson Gallery in 1970, the gallery revisits works and actions from that seminal show in the wider context of the artist's work through the 1970s, a period of extraordinary innovation, productivity and influence.

The work Latham made during this decade, beginning with the Lisson show, confirmed his position at the forefront of the new conceptual and event-based artistic practices. Through the diverse work he was producing in sculpture, film, painting, text, and performance, he also began to distil his 'Time-Base Theorem'. At the heart of the theory is a scale or spectrum, a cosmological system for understanding all phenomena - physical and metaphysical - in terms of time and event. The current exhibition attempts a physical embodiment of Latham's concept of the Time-Base spectrum within the landscape of the gallery, from the smallest measurable event to the greatest.

In 1970, a motorcycle escort transported Latham's glass sphere work Least Event as a Habit through central London to Bell Street. This incredibly fragile object, constructed from one glass vacuum inside another larger glass vacuum, was so minimal as an object as to be almost nothing - a 'not nothing', no 'it', or 'noit' in Latham's terminology - and it embodied Latham's concept of Least Event - an event of the least duration measurable in science. Least Event as a Habit survived its first perilous journey but not its second. The work has been refabricated for this exhibition.

During the course of the original exhibition, Latham's acclaimed film Encyclopedia Britannica Collections MoMA New York and Reina Sofia, Madrid), was being created as a performative, process-based art work. The operators (a role performed in 1970 by owner of the gallery Nicholas Logsdail and musician, writer and curator David Toop) diligently constructed the stop-frame animation, a frame per page of a volume of the Encyclopedia. Latham intended this as an ongoing process which is continued now after a short pause of forty years.

A section of Britannica is inserted into another of Latham's films, Erth (1971), a dramatic countdown through time and space to the surface of the earth. In this exhibition, Erth is the counterpoint to the Least Event, standing in for the cosmos, the longest event defined by the time-base spectrum. Between these extremes, the performance The Government of the First and Thirteenth Chair, first presented at Riverside Studios in 1978, provides a physical framework for the exhibition, summarising the position of humanity within Latham's theory of event.

The title of the exhibition appeared as a Time Sculpture during Latham's first show at Lisson Gallery in 1970. During the third week of the exhibition the gallery manifested itself for short periods in other places than Bell street, including Fiona's shoe, The Stock Exchange and the Insect House at Regent's Park. These places and times were documented on film.

The current exhibition at Lisson Gallery contributes to a wider re-evaluation of Latham's work in film and performance. A DVD publication of Latham's films will be published by Lisson Gallery, LUX, and Flat Time House in September 2010.
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More about this artist

John Latham

Exhibition Images

Installation View
Installation View

John Latham 
<i>Erth</i>, 1971
Ekta 16mm, sound and colour 
25 min
John Latham Erth, 1971 Ekta 16mm, sound and colour 25 min

John Latham 
<i>Erth</i>, 1971
Ekta 16mm, sound and colour 
25 min
John Latham Erth, 1971 Ekta 16mm, sound and colour 25 min

John Latham 
Four Phases of the Sun 1963
Books, wires, plaster, paint on canvas on hardboard
229 x 314 x 23 cm
John Latham Four Phases of the Sun 1963 Books, wires, plaster, paint on canvas on hardboard 229 x 314 x 23 cm

John Latham 
Latter Day Observer 1963
Books, wires, wire-mesh, plaster, paint on canvas on hardboard
97 x 122 x 26 cm
John Latham Latter Day Observer 1963 Books, wires, wire-mesh, plaster, paint on canvas on hardboard 97 x 122 x 26 cm

John Latham 
EVEN TSTRUCTU RE 1966-67
Sheets of paper, staples, cards and string in paint on hardboard
101.5 x 122 cm
John Latham EVEN TSTRUCTU RE 1966-67 Sheets of paper, staples, cards and string in paint on hardboard 101.5 x 122 cm

John Latham 
Noit - One Second Drawing 1970
Ink on paint and board
32.5 x 24.7 cm
John Latham Noit - One Second Drawing 1970 Ink on paint and board 32.5 x 24.7 cm

John Latham 
Least Event as Habit  1970
Two sealed glass spheres with vacuums
Approx 35 cm diameter
John Latham Least Event as Habit 1970 Two sealed glass spheres with vacuums Approx 35 cm diameter

John Latham 
From "First and Thirteenth Chair" 1982
Photograph and chair
John Latham From "First and Thirteenth Chair" 1982 Photograph and chair

John Latham 
The New Economics 1970-85
Canvas on books and wooden box, string and plaster
33 x 37 x 27 cm
John Latham The New Economics 1970-85 Canvas on books and wooden box, string and plaster 33 x 37 x 27 cm

John Latham 
Five noits: One Second Drawings 1971-1972
paint on wood
Variable
John Latham Five noits: One Second Drawings 1971-1972 paint on wood Variable

John Latham 
IN FACT! 1970
Ink on paint and board
22 x 29.5 x 5 cm
John Latham IN FACT! 1970 Ink on paint and board 22 x 29.5 x 5 cm

John Latham 
Untitled (black and white roller painting) 1980
Spray paint on raw canvas, wooden baton
80 x 260 cm
John Latham Untitled (black and white roller painting) 1980 Spray paint on raw canvas, wooden baton 80 x 260 cm

John Latham 
Fiona's Shoe, Stock Exchange, Insect House 1970
16mm film transferred to DVD
9 minutes
John Latham Fiona's Shoe, Stock Exchange, Insect House 1970 16mm film transferred to DVD 9 minutes

John Latham 
On band Q, you, humankind, show up as a plague organism 1996
Text
Dimensions variable
John Latham On band Q, you, humankind, show up as a plague organism 1996 Text Dimensions variable

John Latham 
THE 1976
Lettering on canvas attached to wooden cylinder 
400 cm width, variable length, roller 80 cm diameter
John Latham THE 1976 Lettering on canvas attached to wooden cylinder 400 cm width, variable length, roller 80 cm diameter