Garnering widespread attention for her work that combines conceptual grit, humor and social commentary, Martine Syms has emerged in recent years as one of the defining artists of her generation.
Loser Back Home premieres Syms’ latest works in video, sculpture, painting and photography. The exhibition’s title deliberates upon "dysplacement," a term created by historian Barbara Fields to describe the destruction of place and the loss of a shared sense of connection to one’s familiar or home country. In one of Syms’ new video works, This Is A Studio (2023), the artist uses surveillance footage that captures a late-night police visit, playing within a box covered in imagery from the artist’s daily life. This document raises questions about home, belonging and systems of power—concerns that reappear across the exhibition.
In another new video, i am wise enough to die things go (2023), Syms explores the idea of psychosis through an unnamed protagonist reciting a monologue. Responding to the work of iconic animator Chuck Jones, Syms transfers the form and narrative structure of an animated short into live-action. Working with the inherent challenges and restrictions brought about by this sort of translation, and displaying the work across two split screens, she delves into both the breaking up of images and the breakdown of the psyche. Through a series of visual gags and special effects, and an original score, the work evokes the experience of disorientation that results from being ungrounded.
In another new video, i am wise enough to die things go (2023), Syms explores the idea of psychosis through an unnamed protagonist reciting a monologue. Responding to the work of iconic animator Chuck Jones, Syms transfers the form and narrative structure of an animated short into live-action. Working with the inherent challenges and restrictions brought about by this sort of translation, and displaying the work across two split screens, she delves into both the breaking up of images and the breakdown of the psyche. Through a series of visual gags and special effects, and an original score, the work evokes the experience of disorientation that results from being ungrounded.
Clothes, which Syms often designs herself, offer the Los Angeles-based artist a further medium through which to examine the figure. Historically, the fields of sewing, film editing and computer programming are linked; all were initially considered monotonous and menial work and, therefore, positions often occupied by women. In i am wise enough to die things go, the actor wears a T-shirt that reads “To Hell With My Suffering”—a piece of clothing that has been worn by Syms’ digital avatars in previous videos. In reference to an Arthur Rimbaud poem on freedom and the discrepancy between desire and reality, the T-shirt defiantly declares “Being patient and being bored / Are too simple. To the devil with my cares.”
“My films are about the way routine experiences of spectacular and mundane violence create insanity and despair. Where humor kisses pain.” –Martine Syms
In her textile paintings, an array of previously worn garments—including screen-printed T-shirts, baseball caps and sweatshirts, some branded with high fashion labels—are stitched together into tapestries and stretched over metal frames, often with perforations that allow a view to the wall behind them. Taking on a totemic quality, the paintings become offerings of past, projected and shadow selves.
In the upstairs gallery, Syms presents Dream about the forrest fingering me from both ends (2023), a large wall-based photocollage surrounding an installation of intricate laser-cut sculptures that draw on moving boxes, shopping bags, ubiquitous commercial packaging, the folds of origami and personal ephemera.
“In my installations . . . the cinema is ambient and ever-present. It’s made in collaboration with me and the audience. I build the ‘story’ around how we socialize and behave in public.” –Martine Syms
The video The Fool (2021), playing on a screen housed in a custom cardboard television box, melds varied footage while a narrator describes a brief encounter with a former love interest. A performance of a gymnastics routine merges with iconic Baroque paintings; club scenes mix with a day at the beach. Taking the viewer on a hazy, dream-like journey, the images at times seem to illustrate the story being recounted but elsewhere fail the narrator entirely: in one surreal moment, a large fig tree rolls across a hallway on a skateboard.
The video The Fool (2021), playing on a screen housed in a custom cardboard television box, melds varied footage while a narrator describes a brief encounter with a former love interest. A performance of a gymnastics routine merges with iconic Baroque paintings; club scenes mix with a day at the beach. Taking the viewer on a hazy, dream-like journey, the images at times seem to illustrate the story being recounted but elsewhere fail the narrator entirely: in one surreal moment, a large fig tree rolls across a hallway on a skateboard.
For the photocollage and sculptures alike, Syms has amassed a library of images in a similar vein to stock photography banks, compulsively photographing everyday objects and settings, such as buildings, cars, mountains and flowers. Sourcing from this photographic research as well as from her own collection of ephemera, Syms transforms the material of everyday life into a visual field rich with personal iconography, poeticism and play.
Martine Syms
Loser Back Home
June 2–August 26, 2023