Dreamers Awake at White Cube Bermondsey
Call me naive, but I was earnestly expecting a gallery named White Cube to be an enormous white, cubic building. Maybe one of the other White Cube galleries is, but this one isnât and that was not a good start going in. When I first heard of Dreamers Awake, it was one of those shows that just didnât really draw me in but itâs been consistently applauded and praised in its running so I figured I should probably check it out. Once having gone through the enormous gallery entrance doors, on the wall immediately to the left as you look down this big, concrete hallway with jagged neon lights all the way down, there is a written introduction detailing what Dreamers Awake aims to capture.Â
Woman has a powerful presence in Surrealism. She is the object of masculine desire and fantasy; a harpy, goddess or sphinx; a mystery or threat. Often, she appears decapitated, distorted, trussed up. Fearsome or fetishized, she is always the âotherâ. From todayâs perspective, gender politics can seem the unlikely blind spot of a movement that declared war on patriarchal society, convention and conformity. Nonetheless, from its earliest days female artists have been drawn to Surrealismâs emphasis on personal and artistic freedoms and to the creative potential that the exploration of the unconscious offered. By focusing on the work of women artists, âDreamers Awakeâ shows how, through art foregrounding bodily experience, the symbolic women of Surrealism is refigured as a creative, sentient, thinking being.Â
I strongly recommend reading through the review in The Guardian because that really expanded on that concept from artist to artist. Like I said before, feedback for this exhibition has been predominantly positive. I, however, personally did not like it and not for any particular reason either. I understand the movement, I definitely support it. But what I saw simply wasnât for me. It didnât move me like I want art to tug on my chords.Â
There were a few pieces within the show that I did like, but this is one of those galleries that doesnât tag any of the pieces on display. Instead, you pick up a pamphlet containing maps of each room with each piece illustrated as a number and then find the corresponding artist and title of the work in a list. Sometimes I appreciate that practice because then I can come to my own conclusion without guidance, but in this case, being a group exhibition on top of that, I really would have preferred labels to better differentiate one artistâs work to the next and thatâs why I have absolutely no idea what the pair on the right are called or who theyâre by. The painting on the left is Shannon Boolâs The Five Wives of Lajos Biâro and the canvas in the middle is Eileen Agarâs Points of View.
Need To Know Before You Go:Â
If youâre using Google Maps or CityMapper to find your way to the gallery, make sure you specifically pick the White Cube in Bermondsey as there is another one in Masonâs Yard. White Cube is open Tuesday through Sunday, from 10h to 18h except for Sunday where it opens at noon. Itâs free to visit and in the middle of a very trendy part of Bermondsey surrounded by hip cafes, cute little shoppes, and other galleries. Dreamers Awake is closing on Sunday, September 17th.
Would You Like Some More?
Surrealism is a movement that is clearly alive and well here in London. If youâd like to see for yourself, why not hop over to my post about Patrick Hourihanâs exhibition here?Â