LONDON.- Meeting Point Projects will present Dwelling, a group exhibition that explores how the construction of space is inherently linked with the concept of dwelling. Featuring the artists Yifan Jiang, Charlotte Keates, Iva Kinnaird, Yushi Li, Gus Monday and Tim Wilson, the show curates and contextualizes the works within a gallery space transformed into a living, breathing and immersive environment. Dwelling marks the second exhibition for Meeting Point Projects, following its inaugural show earlier this year, and will take place at 67 York Street Gallery in Marylebone, running 16 September 4 October 2024.
Charlotte Keates Flowers of Forgetting 33 x 20 cm.
Guided by Martin Heideggers (1889-1976) concept of dwelling presented in his essays Building, Dwelling, Thinking (1971), Dwelling explores the domestic environment as a means through which the identities of people and artworks are expressed. The relationship between human beings and their environments is frequently explored in phenomenology where the processes of finding, creating, and dwelling in spaces are seen as fundamental to our existence and the production of meaning. Amongst spaces that house us, the inhabiting of home is something that is both the most universal and the most intimate.
Iva Kinnard Barcode Couch Painting 25 x 122 cm.
Responding to the term dwelling, this exhibition questions how spaces foster domesticity. Across motifs such as furniture items, interior environments, and architectural structures, artworks in the show examine domesticity as a network of intangible and accumulative qualities such as conditioned behaviours, memories, and nostalgia. Rather than a physical location, artworks observe places that facilitate complex social functions and reveal its occupants sense of self and relations with the external world. At the same time, as the art dwells in the domestic space, the domestic space also dwells in the art.
Tim Wilson Painting (Landscape 55.88 x 76.2 cm).
For this exhibition, Meeting Point Projects is collaborating with RIBA-registered architecture and interior design practice Studio Ūma to transform the gallery space into an immersive living room with design objects from Le Corbusier, Finn Juhl, and Hans Wegner. Visitors will be able to enter the exhibition as if transported into a private home, blurring the lines between domestic and public consumption of art, contemplating the intersection of art and space, and the role of art in forming private identities and collective experiences.
Yifan Jiang Painting 1 - 110 x 90 cm.
As part of the exhibitions events programme, Meeting Point Projects is hosting three supper clubs in The Royal Oak across the street from the gallery in collaboration with three different independent food creators/chefs with a focus on home cooking. The supper clubs are treated as another medium through which the exhibition explores its theme, namely, the domesticity of cuisine and how it is used to pass down cultural identities, traditions, memories, and systems of knowledge.
Meeting Point Projects is a curatorial initiative dedicated to gathering, discovering and living with contemporary art, culture, and cuisine. Its programme of exhibitions and dining events focuses on highlighting the dialogue between artists, makers, and creatives from diverse cultural backgrounds, at different stages of careers, and across various disciplines. Founded by London-based independent curator Matilda Liu, Meeting Point Projects has an emphasis on interdisciplinary collaboration, seeking to bridge the theoretical frameworks within contemporary art with other creative mediums, expanding the critical contexts in which art and culture can be shown and engaged with.