Joanna Rajkowska “Painkillers” at l’étrangère, London

1.-Joanna-Rajkowsak,-Uzi-submachine-gun,-2014_564
Joanna Rajkowska, Uzi submachine gun, 2014, life-­size cast, powdered analgesic, polyurethane resin. ©Joanna Rajkowska. Courtesy ŻAK | BRANICKA, Berlin & l’étrangère, London

JOANNA RAJKOWSKA
PAINKILLERS

17 September – 24 October 2015
l’étrangère, London

Private view: Wednesday 16 September 2015, 6.30 – 8.30pm

l’étrangère is delighted to announce Painkillers, which brings into conversation new and existing sculptural works by the Polish artist, Joanna Rajkowska. Noted for her ambitious interventions in public space, as well as her objects, films, photography, installations and ephemeral actions, Rajkowska’s practice interrogates individual and collective bodies as politicised sites of historical, ideological and psychological conflict. For her inaugural exhibition at l’étrangère, Rajkowska unites two object-based series under the rubric, Painkillers, in order to explore the at times uncomfortable connections between modern warfare, healing systems and the practices of Western science.

At the centre of these troubling relationships is a new series produced especially for the exhibition. Painkillers II (2015) continues Rajkowska’s on-going interest in the paradoxical interrelation of military weapons and pharmaceuticals, whereby the artist makes casts from modern weapons and ‘weaponised’ objects out of resin and powdered analgesics. Through extended research into case studies involving medicinal manufacturers in the facilitation of biological weaponry, Rajkowska confronts a set of disturbing and historically-obscured (mis)uses of scientific knowledge and power.

From the clinical suggestiveness of a pair of latex gloves to the seductive modernist design of a nuclear bomb, Rajkowska’s choice of objects is not limited by time, place, or the method of pain administration. What unites these spectral forms is their disturbing conflation of death and healing processes. As the artist comments, ‘it seems that means of killing and means of saving peoples’ lives are related to each other in terms of the forces generating them. This closeness can probably also be found between the means of inflicting pain and relieving it’.

In the back gallery we stumble upon a quieter object: a multi-chambered crystal formation resting precariously on a wooden palette. This mobile chakra was found by Rajkowska in Brazil and was initially installed in the public space outside Erdington Library, Birmingham, as a site to subtly affect human bodies, suspend logic and introduce new social rituals. Now unearthed from its original home and hidden within the enclosed space of the gallery, the spiritual promise embedded within the work’s title – Soon Everything Will Change (2014) – is rendered redundant within the deathly context of the exhibition.

In its first location, Rajkowska twisted the definition of chakra from being a spiritual centre in the human body to a point of high energy in the organism of the city. Here, by contrasting the crystal’s inconceivable history with the fragility of the human body and the instantaneity of its death that is implied by Painkillers II, she returns this object to its native meaning, simultaneously unifying and futile in its non-human temporality.

Joanna Rajkowska (b. 1968) is a Polish artist based in London, working with objects, films, photography, installations, ephemeral actions, and widely discussed interventions in public space. Rajkowska’s artwork has been presented in the UK, Germany, Poland, France, Switzerland, Brazil, Sweden, US, Palestine and Turkey, among others. Her public projects include commissions by CCA Zamek Ujazdowski (2007, Oxygenator, Poland), Trafo Gallery (2008, The Airways, Hungary), Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw (2009, Ravine, Poland), The Showroom (2010, Chariot, UK), British Council (2010, Benjamin in Konya, Turkey), 7th Berlin Biennale (2012, Born in Berlin, Germany), Royal Society of Arts, Citizen Power Peterborough programme’s Arts and Social Change, Arts Council England (2012, unrealised project, The Peterborough Child, UK), Frieze Projects 2012 (2012, Forcing a Miracle, UK) and Institute for Contemporary Ideas and Art (2014, Carpet, Sweden).

l’étrangère
44a Charlotte Road,
London, EC2A 3PD
UK
letrangere.net

Opening Hours
Tuesday – Saturday: 11H00 – 18H00
or by appointment

2.-Joanna-Rajkowska,-M4A1-carbine,-2014_564
Joanna Rajkowska, M4A1 carbine, 2014, life-­size cast, powdered analgesic, polyurethane resin. ©Joanna Rajkowska. Courtesy ŻAK | BRANICKA, Berlin & l’étrangère, London

4.-Joanna-Rajkowska,-5.56-x-45mm-NATO-cartridge,-7.62-x-39mm-M43-cartridge-and-9-x-19mm-NATO-cartridge,-2014_564
Joanna Rajkowska, NATO cartridge, M43 cartridge and NATO cartridge, 2014, life-­size cast, powdered analgesic, polyurethane resin. ©Joanna Rajkowska. Courtesy ŻAK | BRANICKA, Berlin & l’étrangère, London

5.Model-of-Israeli-nuclear-weapon-core-as-photographed-by-Mordechai-Vanunu-in-1985,-2015_564
Joanna Rajkowska, Model of Israeli nuclear weapon core as photographed by Mordechai Vanunu in 1985, 2015,, life-­size cast, powdered analgesic, polyurethane resin. ©Joanna Rajkowska. Courtesy ŻAK | BRANICKA, Berlin & l’étrangère, London

10.-Joanna-Rajkowska,-Soon-Everything-Will-Change-(detail-2)_564
Joanna Rajkowska, Soon Everything Will Change, 2014, (detail) crystal formation. ©Joanna Rajkowska. Courtesy ŻAK | BRANICKA, Berlin & l’étrangère, London

8.-Joanna-Rajkowska,-Soon-Everything-Will-Change,-2014_564
Joanna Rajkowska, Soon Everything Will Change, 2014, crystal formation. ©Joanna Rajkowska. Courtesy ŻAK | BRANICKA, Berlin & l’étrangère, London

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