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Blum & Poe
2727 S. La Cienega Boulevard
Los Angeles, California 90034
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Solo Exhibition by Linder
by Blum & Poe
Location: Blum & Poe
Artist(s): Linder
Date: 12 Sep - 26 Oct 2013

Blum & Poe presents their first solo exhibition with the English artist Linder, who is internationally renown for her collage technique, radical feminism, and punk aesthetic. This exhibition marks Linder's first solo presentation in Los Angeles and includes works never before seen on the West Coast.

Linder's production from the 1970s demonstrates her early interest in gender performativity and the commodification of the body. Several photographs document the transvestites at Manchester's Dickens nightclub, a relative oasis where Linder (and Pete Shelley from the Buzzcocks) would visit to escape the hostile city. During this time she created the iconic cover for the Buzzcocks' single Orgasm Addict, a collage of a female nude whose head has been replaced with a hand-held iron. Linder combines magazine images of women's sexuality and domesticity to openly criticize conventional female roles and representation. In a suite of twenty-four collages, titled Pretty Girls, female models are merged with household objects in jarring juxtapositions. The women in various softcore poses are mirrored in small, fluid drawings sketched from men's magazines of the same period.

In 1978, Linder formed the post-punk band Ludus, applying collage techniques to songwriting and performance. Forceful in her demeanor and stage presence, documentary footage taken at The Hacienda club in Manchester shows her wearing a dress made of raw meat. In several 1980s black and white photographs from the SheShe series, Linder uses provocative props, such as bandages, keys, and corsets from the 1940s, in conjunction with her own likeness as a critique of the fashion industry. Additional photographs of the singer Morrissey, who Linder met in 1976, record their enduring friendship and form the basis of her book Morrissey Shot (1992), an intimate portrait of his life on tour in the early 90s.

Recent collages continue Linder's preoccupation with fashion and dance, such as in a series depicting the famous Russian ballet dancer Léonide Massine and a collaboration with Vogue fashion photographer Tim Walker. In her "splosh" photographs -- a fetish term used to describe images of women covered in fluids and/or food -- Linder returns to using her body as a performative element to examine the current state of female representation within the media.

About the artist:

Linder was born in Liverpool, England in 1954. She has had solo exhibitions at the Hepworth Wakefield; Tate St. Ives; Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead; and MoMA/PS1, New York. Femme/objet, her comprehensive retrospective, recently traveled from the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris to the Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover. Her work has been included in numerous group exhibitions in venues such as Tate Britain; Kunsthall Oslo, Norway; Kölnischer Kunstverein, Cologne, Germany; Kunsthalle Vienna, Austria; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL; Barbican, London; Kunstverein Munich, Germany; and Institute of Contemporary Art, London.

Image: © Linder, Blum and Poe

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