LONDON.- Virus Classics, a collection of sculptures and prints, is a sharply humorous response to the current state of affairs by artist, photographer and historian
Jolyon Fenwick. Through this new collection he has created a lightly-satirical, black-humoured and, with luck, soon hugely nostalgic - graphic record of these extraordinary times.
Twenty-one spoof volumes, each mimicking the size and style of the paperbacks of The Penguin English Library, designed by Coralie Bickford-Smith, take some of our most treasured literary classics and give them a topical spin. Title plate and logo debossed, the artworks feel both hearteningly familiar and laden with satire. Titles in the series include At Least 2 Metres From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy, Covids Metamorphoses, Lionel Shrivers We Need to talk about Boris and Samuel Becketts Waiting for Ocado.
Beyond the wit of the titles, the designs reveal yet another layer. For example, whilst the cover of the first Russian edition of Tolstoys Anna Karenina bore the design of the Imperial Russian Eagles, here in Anna Coronina the same eagles are vigorously coughing. For Tom Browns Home Schooldays, a take on Hughes classic Tom Browns Schooldays, the cover is scattered with Playstations and Xbox controllers we all know what home schooling really means. John Le Carrés masterpiece The Constant Gardener becomes The Constant Gardening, on which Fenwick portrays secateurs and watering cans, deckchairs and paddling pools, mini bottles of whisky and garden sheds, depicting several distinct experiences of lockdown. Many embraced gardening as part of the default national obsession; for others, loss of jobs or romantic opportunity meant more time spent alone.
The Covid-19 pandemic has introduced us all to a new reality. New restrictions to our daily existence; new codes of behaviour. While we await a return to our normal lives and cherished freedoms, this period with all its unprecedented challenges and peculiarities will be an historic experience none of us will ever forget. Artists worldwide have recorded their impressions of this age of Covid in painting, poetry, dance and music. Fenwicks contribution is one that cleverly melds considered concept and exquisite design with a sharp edge of British humour.
My efforts are not half as handsome as the supremely elegant designs by Coralie BickfordSmith, but her format did allow one or two extra black jokes a great tradition of the British in a crisis but one, it seems, hardly observed at all in this one about the more egregious aspects (lockdown, quarantine, social distancing, school closure, regional hostility, panic buying, enforced leisure, epidemic alcoholism, government wrong-headedness and individual and national bankruptcy) of this awful period.
I think my favourite is probably Lord Edgware dies after Testing Positive as, one imagines, even if hed been bludgeoned to death in the library with the lead piping the powers that be would still hungrily add him to the Covid figures. --Jolyon Fenwick