Babak Golkar: a fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work
Private View | Wednesday 28 September, 6-8pm
Edel Assanti presents 'A fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work', Babak Golkar’s debut London solo exhibition.
The exhibition is the second installment in Golkar’s Return Project, a series of assemblage works where readymade consumer articles are dissected, transformed and reinserted into their wholesale environment. A fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work borrows its title from the motto of the American Federation of Labor; the exhibition takes labour as its central theme, addressing the role of the individual within large-scale commerce and mechanised production.
Golkar initiates each artwork by purchasing an item from a major retailer. The item is brought to the studio for photographic documentation. The object is then dismantled and reconfigured into a new consumer article – an original artwork – related to the original in its physicality and content, but radically altered in each case. The new object is then documented, and along with the original photograph, presented as a diptych printed on an identical scale to the original object.
Throughout the process, the original tags and labels remain intact. The new object is officially declared as an artwork by a carefully hidden authenticity accreditation note. The artwork is then returned to the store from which it was purchased with its original tags for a full refund. The store’s return policy determines the timeframe for the studio process behind each work. The returned art object enters into and circulates the inventory of the store and is once again available for sale at its original price.
Following its alteration, the leftover materials from the original object’s reconfiguring are employed to form a residual object that accompanies the photographic diptych, exhibited together as a singular artwork. Each work in the exhibition is planned and executed around a specific concept within the theme of labour, specific to the original object’s broader allusion whilst examining issues ranging from geopolitics to workers’ rights and globalization.
Babak Golkar was born in Berkeley in 1977. He spent most of his formative years in Tehran until 1996 when he migrated to Vancouver, where he obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Arts from Emily Carr Institute in 2003 and a Masters of Fine Arts from the University of British Columbia in 2006. Recent solo exhibitions include Of Labour, Of Dirt Sazman Aab, Tehran, Iran (2014); The Return Project, The Third Line, Dubai, UAE (2014); Time to Let Go, Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, Canada (2014); Dialectic of Failure, West Vancouver Museum, Vancouver, Canada (2013); Ground for Standing and Understanding, VOLTA NY Featured Project, New York, USA (2013); Friday Late Special Project, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK (2012); Spatial Transformation, Hilger Modern Contemporary, Vienna, Austria (2012); Parergon, The Third Line, Dubai, UAE (2011). Selected group exhibitions
include Common Grounds, Museum Villa Stuck, Munich, Germany (2014); L'avenir: 9th La Biennale de Montreal, Musee d'art Contemporain de Montreal, Canada (2014); La Route Bleue, Boghossian Foundation, Villa Empain, Brussels, Belgium (2013); Come Invest in Us, You'll Strike Gold, Brot Kunsthalle, Vienna, Austria; Jameel Prize Exhibition, Casa Arabe, Madrid, Spain (2012).
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Babak Golkar, Arm (with In Advance of a Broken Head), 2016
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Babak Golkar, From E.I.C. with Love (with Hessian Glove For a Ten Year Old Boy), 2016
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Babak Golkar, Shepherd and the Witch (with Primitive Accumulation), 2016
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Babak Golkar, Gold Standard (with The Burden of Carrying Weight), 2016
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Babak Golkar, Martyrs (with Taste of Cherry), 2016
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Babak Golkar, The Philosopher's Stone (with Trouble in Paradise: From the end of history to the end of capitalism, ISBN 978-0-141-97955-7), 2016
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Babak Golkar, Diamond Ring (with NO CASH VALUE), 2016
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Babak Golkar in This is Tomorrow
'Babak Golkar: a fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work' by William Davie 1 November 201601 November 2016 Babak Golkar is happy to engage viewers on many levels with his work. His debut solo exhibition in London at Edel Assanti,...Read more -
Babak Golkar in CanadianArt
'Scream into my Sculptures, Please: Babak Golkar and the Art of Frustration' by Leah Sandals 5 October 201605 October 2016 A pot you are supposed to scream into. An Ikea vase recast in porcelain and returned to the store, never to be...Read more