Max Wigram

John Giorno

20 Nov 2013 - 18 Jan 2014

John Giorno, EVERYONE GETS LIGHTER, 20 November 2013 - 18 January 2014
JOHN GIORNO
EVERYONE GETS LIGHTER
20 November 2013 – 18 January 2014

Max Wigram Gallery is pleased to present EVERYONE GETS LIGHTER, the first one-person exhibition in the UK by American artist and poet John Giorno.

For almost half a century, Giorno has been exploring and developing new media through which poetry can be disseminated and reach new audiences, an operation he continues with thisexhibition. With twenty-four newwatercolour Poem Paintings, a performance,and the iconic Dial-a-Poem, theexhibition offers an overview of how the Giornoseeks alternative ways of writing and presenting his poetry and connecting with an audience in powerful ways,inviting us to reflect on how we perceive words, and images.

In the Poem Paintings, Giorno transposes punchy sentences from his own poems onto paper in bold, white capital letters reminiscent of newspaper headlines - a font that he developed with a graphic designer, and has been using since 1984. Thewords are set off against painterly backgrounds of pasteltoned washes of colour. The viewer both reads and looks at the charged sentences like thanks 4 nothing or just say no to family values, engaging with the poem on two different, simultaneous yet exclusive levels. Giorno provides a visual and narrative anchor by presenting the watercoloursin a sequence that follows the chromatic spectrum: from yellow to blue to green, a poetic narrative is developed through purely visual means. In these worksthus, painting becomes a vehicle for poetry.

The search for new media for poetic dissemination led Giorno to integrate technology into his work, creating the seminal Dial-a-Poem. A project that was famously presented at MoMA in1970 and again in 2012, Dial-a-Poembrings people over two hundred random poems read aloud by their authors, includingmusicians, artists and writers who were friends and colleagues of Giorno -includingCharles Bukowski, William Burroughs, John Cage and Allen Ginsberg. At Max Wigram Gallery, visitors will be able to call poems from a telephone in the exhibition, or online.

These aural, visual and textual venuesfor the circulation of poetry conflate in Giorno’s powerful performance, with which he will inaugurate the exhibition. The incisive pronunciation and forceful delivery recall the headline-style font of the Poem Paintings, and the presence of the poet’s own body seems to transform thewords into palpable entities, engaging with the audience in a physical, visceral manner. All ofGiorno’s projects to date have had one purpose: to connect with an audience. In EVERYONE GETS LIGHTER, Giorno succeeds by presenting poetry that isnot only read, but alsoexperienced.

John Giorno(b. 1936 in Brooklyn) lives and works in New York. Giorno’ssolo exhibitions include EATING THE SKY, Broadway Billboard at Socrates Sculpture Park, Long Island, NY; Faux Movement, Centre d’art contemporain, Metz; Star 69: Dial-A-Poem Relics, Venice Biennale, and gallery exhibitions at Galerie Almine Rech, Paris2012and 2009, Almine Rech Brussels,2010, Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, New York, 2010, Galerier de Jour AgnesB, Paris 2005. Group exhibitions includeImagine the Imaginary, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, 2012; Ecstatic Alphabets/Heaps of Language, MoMA, New York, 2012; Traces du sacré, Centre Pompidou, 2008; Martian Museum of Terrestrial Art, Barbican Centre, London, 2008. Giorno has been a prolific performer since the 1960s, and as GiornoPoetry Systems he released more than 50 albums of music and poetry. He famously was the subject of Andy Warhol’s first film, Sleep. He is the author of several poetry collections including Subduing Demons in America: Selected Poems, 1962–2007. Giorno’s work is part of important public collections, including Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris; MUDAM, Musée d'Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean, Luxembourg; MoMA, Museum of Modern Art, New York. Giorno will be the subject of a major retrospective of his life and work atPalais de Tokyo, Paris in 2015.
 

Tags: John Cage, Allen Ginsberg, John Giorno, Andy Warhol