- Artist
- Carey Young born 1970
- Medium
- Photograph, colour, on paper mounted onto aluminium
- Dimensions
- Image: 1219 × 1419 mm
- Collection
- Tate
- Acquisition
- Presented by Tate Patrons 2009
- Reference
- P79819
Summary
In this colour photograph the artist Carey Young is depicted lying stretched out and face down in a shallow concavity between two mounds of rocks and dirt, situated in a dusty landscape. In the distance, a cityscape featuring several construction cranes emerges through a hazy atmosphere. No other figures populate the scene, the emptiness of which is heightened by the large expanse of cloudy sky that occupies almost half of the composition. The fact that Young wears a plain, dark grey business suit and high-heeled shoes only serves to emphasise the peculiarity of her pose in the landscape.
This is one of eight photographs from Young’s Body Techniques series, made in 2007. In each photograph the artist wears a smart two-piece suit and is pictured alone in the centre of the image within a landscape featuring recently completed or half-finished construction projects in the cities of Dubai and Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates. The actions that Young is seen performing make reference to artworks from the 1960s and 1970s that explored the relationship between the artist’s body and its surroundings. These art historical citations are acknowledged by the titles of each photograph, which identify the original work that Young’s action re-stages, along with the name of the artist and the date it was first made. Four of the photographs – those referencing Richard Long, Ulrich Ruckriem, Bruce Nauman and Mierle Laderman Ukeles – depict Young in an active pose (such as walking or washing steps), while the other four – this work, the image referencing Kirsten Justesen and the two photographs referencing VALIE EXPORT – portray her in a more inactive state (lying or curled up on the ground). The photographs can be shown individually, and when all eight are exhibited together there is no prescribed order of display. The Body Techniques series acquired by Tate is number four in an edition of five.
As the title confirms, this work makes reference to Parallel Stress 1970 (Tate T12403) by the American artist Dennis Oppenheim (1938–2011). Oppenheim’s work consists of a pair of black and white photographs and a short explanatory text displayed in a column formation that together document two short performances carried out by the artist in industrial wastelands around New York. In the upper image Oppenheim is depicted hanging at full stretch in a v-shape between two walls made of concrete breeze blocks. In the lower image, which Young’s photograph closely resembles, Oppenheim lies face down in a large dip between two mounds of earth on an abandoned sump on Long Island. Whereas Oppenheim’s work was made at decaying urban sites, Young’s photograph highlights the rapid urban expansion taking place in the UAE. Similarly, Oppenheim’s workmanlike appearance (he wears jeans and boots in Parallel Stress) has been replaced by Young’s business attire, reflecting a shift from traditional industrial economies towards contemporary corporate culture.
The Body Techniques series was produced during Young’s residency at the Sharjah Biennial Artist in Residence Programme. In that it draws attention to the rapid growth of cities in the UAE, stimulated by private and corporate wealth, and pictures an environment in which human life other than the artist’s is conspicuously absent, the series presents a dystopian vision of global capitalism. As the art historian Julia Bryan-Wilson has commented, these photographs ‘depict the architecture of multinational commerce as depersonalized and dehumanizing, futuristic yet dusty projects of progress perverted’ (Bryan-Wilson 2010, p.246). Within this context, Young’s re-enactments of works of art that sought to illustrate the ways in which bodies and environments exerted pressure on each other appear to speak of the agency of art in the early twenty-first century, although the exact meaning of each gesture is left in doubt. As Young herself has explained: ‘it is ambiguous whether the artist is molding herself to the landscape or exploring ways of resisting it.’ (Carey Young, ‘Body Techniques’, http://www.careyyoung.com/past/bodytechniques.html, accessed 14 April 2014.)
Since graduating with a Masters degree in photography from the Royal College of Art in London in 1997 Young, who often appears in her work dressed in a suit, has sought to investigate the role of the artist within a corporate world (see, for example, Everything You’ve Heard is Wrong 1999, Tate T12148). As Young explained in 2011,
The ‘I’ in my work is first and foremost the figure of an artist. The works appear to be self portraits, but they are not autobiographical. I want this figure to represent any artist ... except this is an artist who has half lost their identity, or gained another – perhaps the ‘other’ – to also become what looks like a professional or businessperson of some kind. What I am interested in is the artist as chameleon, and also a kind of non-identity.
(Young and Magid 2011, accessed 14 April 2014.)
The title of the Body Techniques series refers to French sociologist Marcel Mauss’s influential theories of ‘the techniques of the body’, which he developed in the 1930s. Mauss examined how activities such as walking, sitting, standing and sleeping vary not just between individuals, but also between different communities, societies, classes and across historical eras.
Further reading
Julia Bryan-Wilson, ‘Inside Job: The Art of Carey Young’, Artforum, October 2010, pp.240–7.
Carey Young and Jill Magid, ‘The Color of Law’, Mousse, no.29, June 2011, www.careyyoung.com/essays/mousse.html, accessed 14 April 2014.
Raphael Gygax and Heike Munder (eds.), Carey Young: Subject to Contract, exhibition catalogue, Migros Museum of Contemporary Art, Zurich 2013, pp.66–81, reproduced p.69.
Richard Martin
June 2014
Revised by Christopher Griffin
September 2014
Supported by Christie’s.
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