© Carl Andre, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ

Carl Andre: then I pulled his gun and I, 1975
typewriter ink on paper, 28 x 21.5 cm, 11 x 8 1/2 in
signed and dated on front
unique
© the Artist, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ


TYPED


Sadie Coles is pleased to present TYPED, an exhibition of works all made on or in close relation to the typewriter. With its roots in a patent from 1714, the typewriter came into its own in the twentieth century as an indispensable tool for businesses and professional writers. A century characterised by a rise in the value of seeing and sight, the proliferation of cinema was one of the leading factors that emphasised the visual sign at the expense of all else, and introduced a radically new syntax. Not only was the word subordinated to the image, but also the way images were linked to words was often innovative and various.


The rise of the typewriter it seems was, in turn, a prelude to visual poetry and the typing machine became a favourite instrument for visual poets, notably in the Calligrammes by Guillaume Apollinaire and the poetry of writers such as E. E. Cummings and Ezra Pound. In the 1950s, the typewriter became a vital tool for the Beat Generation, Jack Kerouac typed "On The Road" on a single roll of paper, while in William S. Burrough's "Naked Lunch" the machine is personified. Later, with the dematerialisation of the art object in the 1960s, artists adopted systems to organise or expedite their processes and the typewriter served as an ideal device for distancing the artist's hand.


The artists in TYPED use the typewriter in a myriad of ways. Some use it as a way of investigating language: works by Carl Andre form part of a long history in concrete poetry; Christopher Knowles' obsessive works on paper using a 1980s electric typewriter involve idiosyncratic linguistics and simple designs; Sue Tompkins layers and repeats words to sometimes hypnotic effect. Others capitalise on the virtual obsolescence of the tool: Frances Stark's carbon copies of type by hand inadvertently invite blemish while Janice Kerbel's love letters pay homage to the Underwood brand of the machine. In other instances the distinctly everyday typewriter font adds prosaic humour as in Lowe and Thomson's "The Harang-Utang Letters 1993-1999". Curiously versatile, the typewriter has also been used more figuratively as in Dirk Krecker's dense landscapes, the flickering creations of a techno-dandy. TYPED also includes other works by Angela Bulloch, Liam Gillick, Cerith Wyn Evans, Adam McEwen and Richard Prince.


Exhibition 5 March - 5 April 2008

Gallery hours Tues-Sat 10 am - 6 pm


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