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Philip Dean

Things fall apart

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Dark images of cultural interrogation were blue-tacked to THAT's white brick walls in late August. Sheets of litho paper glossed with su­permarket enamel gridded works in an "ideologically correct" gesture of inbuilt poten­tial ephemerality. Across the bottom of the central work of cultural despair, Things Fall Apart was written in hasty and fugitive chalk. With perhaps unintended irony, reference to Chinua Achebe's novel of cultural disintegration and hegemonic relations also referenced the subversion of the art object. 

Philip Dean underscores slices of history with temporal frigility, but overlays a sense of per­manency by drawing on an "old master" tradi­tion. Postmodern quotation is considered by the artist as "a tendency towards the single proposition that nothing is original" (P.Dean, "Against Silence", THAT Contemporary Art space Newsletter, August 1987.) Yet Dean's use of quotation is not unadulterated or disaf­fected. In the Economic Interest usurps authority from Northern European altarpieces, in particular from Grünewald, and the resultant cohesive triptych could be an in-focus 1980s Beckmann. In this work especially, the quota­tion is not specific. Rather, it moves towards the syncretic. Philip Dean's urban crucifixion is braced at left by a jaundiced St. Sebastian beneath a factory skyline, and at right by a woman twisted with crutches, both full-sized figures compressing a doubled-over naked Christ figure whose contorted gaze beneath a barbed-wire crown fixes the viewer. The bond­ing of commerce and worker martyrdom is em­phasized by the truncated bureaucratic "patrons"/voyeurs at bottom, and by junk-mail crosses and jewel cut-outs masquerading as sources of celestial light. An inscription further directs meaning. 

In his verbal statement, "Against Silence", Philip Dean argues for art to "be meaningful (sic) on the larger stage of culture", for art to

Philip Dean, In the Economic Interest, 1987

Philip Dean, In the Economic Interest, 1987