The Collectors Room
The Collector鈥檚 Room sees JGM Gallery transformed into a parlour room of a collector with a leaning towards illusion, stage magic and the escapologist Harry Houdini. In this room we encounter artworks such as spirit levels, levitations, gospel magic props, tarot cards, portraits of magicians, antique keys, handcuffs, sword boxes, escape trunks, magic wands, smoke, and mirrors. This wunderkammer installation is a replica of the collector鈥檚 own room, herself a young, retired, reclusive magician, turned feverish art collector, who obtained a good many of the works in exchange for personal performances of illusion.
It is not known why she retired; some say a transformation act went terribly wrong, while others heard that she feared the strength of her own powers. Although the retired-magician-cum-collector would, of course, never reveal her secrets, here in this collection of artworks we might share a glimpse into her Houdini-esque obsession. Harry Houdini was born Erik Weisz on March 24, 1874 to a Rabbi and his wife in Budapest. At 17 he began his magic career, first with card tricks, then escapology with his brother Theodore at Coney Island as 鈥楾he Brothers Houdini鈥, and later with Bess, his beloved wife and stage assistant, performing illusions and theatrical stunts of escapes.
Houdini spent much of his life researching spiritualism 1 and psychic phenomena and became known as a great debunker of fake spiritualists, himself being able to recreate with stage props every event of proposed psychic phenomena that he witnessed. Houdini offered cash prizes to anyone who could demonstrate actual supernatural abilities, the prize was never collected, and his search continued. The Collector鈥檚 Room holds three narratives: the act of collecting, the lens of fiction, and the illusion of magic. An intangible transformation occurs where the potency of these works in this space take on new meanings due to our viewing experience altering and 鈥榗ontorting鈥 slightly when presented with a fictional agency.
We could call this misdirection or sleight-of-hand, or one of many other effects used (to different ends) by stage magicians, faith healers, politicians and, also, visual artists, who using the effect of 鈥榩roduction鈥 (i.e. rabbit from a hat) create something from nothing as part of their own presentation, wielding the unconscious into material, thoughts into actions, the invisible, visible. The Collector鈥檚 Room becomes a space where myth, rumour and illusion hang waiting and whispering. At once chattering with mysteries and silent in their gaze.
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The Collector鈥檚 Room sees JGM Gallery transformed into a parlour room of a collector with a leaning towards illusion, stage magic and the escapologist Harry Houdini. In this room we encounter artworks such as spirit levels, levitations, gospel magic props, tarot cards, portraits of magicians, antique keys, handcuffs, sword boxes, escape trunks, magic wands, smoke, and mirrors. This wunderkammer installation is a replica of the collector鈥檚 own room, herself a young, retired, reclusive magician, turned feverish art collector, who obtained a good many of the works in exchange for personal performances of illusion.
It is not known why she retired; some say a transformation act went terribly wrong, while others heard that she feared the strength of her own powers. Although the retired-magician-cum-collector would, of course, never reveal her secrets, here in this collection of artworks we might share a glimpse into her Houdini-esque obsession. Harry Houdini was born Erik Weisz on March 24, 1874 to a Rabbi and his wife in Budapest. At 17 he began his magic career, first with card tricks, then escapology with his brother Theodore at Coney Island as 鈥楾he Brothers Houdini鈥, and later with Bess, his beloved wife and stage assistant, performing illusions and theatrical stunts of escapes.
Houdini spent much of his life researching spiritualism 1 and psychic phenomena and became known as a great debunker of fake spiritualists, himself being able to recreate with stage props every event of proposed psychic phenomena that he witnessed. Houdini offered cash prizes to anyone who could demonstrate actual supernatural abilities, the prize was never collected, and his search continued. The Collector鈥檚 Room holds three narratives: the act of collecting, the lens of fiction, and the illusion of magic. An intangible transformation occurs where the potency of these works in this space take on new meanings due to our viewing experience altering and 鈥榗ontorting鈥 slightly when presented with a fictional agency.
We could call this misdirection or sleight-of-hand, or one of many other effects used (to different ends) by stage magicians, faith healers, politicians and, also, visual artists, who using the effect of 鈥榩roduction鈥 (i.e. rabbit from a hat) create something from nothing as part of their own presentation, wielding the unconscious into material, thoughts into actions, the invisible, visible. The Collector鈥檚 Room becomes a space where myth, rumour and illusion hang waiting and whispering. At once chattering with mysteries and silent in their gaze.
Artists on show
- Alastair Gordon
- Alice Wilson
- Andrew Grassie
- Anne-Marie Creamer
- Austin Eddy
- Barbara Nicholls
- Caterina Lewis
- Chris Jones
- Dan Sturgis
- David Ben White
- Dominic Beattie
- Hiroe Komai
- Holly Stevenson
- Isha Bohling
- James Fisher
- James Hopkins
- Jessica Voorsanger
- John Greenwood
- John Richert
- Jonathan Allen
- Joy Jones Kngwarreye
- Juan Bolivar
- Justin Hibbs
- K. Yoland
- Karen David
- Karl Marrow
- Kate McLeod
- Katie Goodwin
- Katrina Blannin
- Lex Shute
- Ludovica Gioscia
- Machiko Edmondson
- Neil Zakiewicz
- Phyllis Thomas
- Plastique Fantastique
- Ralph Anderson
- Ralph Anderson
- Richard Ducker
- Richard Kirwan
- Richard Wathen
- Rosalind Davis
- Sophia Starling
- Stella Capes
- Suzanne Treister
- Tim Ellis