Wednesday, 19 January 2011

This is Tomorrow

And so to the Whitechapel Gallery to see This is Tomorrow, an account of the production process of this seminal exhibition.

During the 1950s mass production and new technologies were celebrated by the Media. Novel materials were to influence all areas of life, from the daily maintenance of living spaces and the built environment as well as the production of art.

Architect, writer and founder member of Pentagram Theo Crosby’s initial idea for an exhibition involving architects, artists, designers and theorists resulted in This is Tomorrow, which took place at the Whitechapel in 1956 in collaboration with members of the Independent Group. The theme was the ‘modern’ way of living and the exhibition was based on a model of collaborative art practice. The 38 participants formed 12 groups, which worked towards producing one artwork.

Just What Is It that Makes Today’s Homes So Different,
So Appealing? © Whitechapel Gallery
  
One of the group members, Richard Hamilton, produced his 1956 collage Just What Is It that Makes Today’s Homes So Different, So Appealing? for the exhibition. It is considered by critics and historians to be one of the early works of Pop Art.

An iconic show in its conception and realisation it has continuously interested artists, theorists and curators ever since due to the challenge it posed for the creative practitioners and visitors alike. The former, as each group was formed by an architect, a designer, an artist and a theorist, were requested to amalgamate their individual approaches and produce a work by deploying a new methodology. The public, with no interpretation panels and other information available, had to make their own judgements as to how to navigate inside the gallery and interpret the works they viewed.