Featuring an interview with Sina Najafi, an essay by Martin Herbert, and
designed by Dominique Clausen, this is the first major monograph on the
British-born, New York-based artist Oliver Clegg. An eclectic,
polyphonic, and multidisciplinary artist, Clegg's oeuvre stretches from
painting, drawing, and printmaking to sculpture, installation,
site-specific art, participatory projects, and beyond. Indeed, his
practice is in many ways a shining example of 'post-medium' creativity
today, pursuing the essence of art itself beyond any specific medium or
artform. The irony is, he's pretty damn good with each artform too.
With his erudite, surprising, and striking repertoire, and his diverse
materials and methods (from glass, wood, and steel to neon, resin, and
concrete, weaving and casting to engraving and industrial manufacture),
Clegg offers the viewer a complex, sometimes playful, other times moving
journey into existential and ontological notions of objecthood and
matter, images and signs, language and communication, creation and
being. From the studio and gallery walls to the streets of London and
New York, from Freud's house to the Joshua Tree National Park, from
foosball tables to state asylums, Clegg turns up to do remarkable things
with the fabric of spacetime.
And yes, it's an emotional rollercoaster of a ride - in fact, Clegg's
oeuvre spans a significant proportion of the spectrum of human emotion,
his unique trans-Atlantic blend of humor, sarcasm, and wit coming face
to face with the much more serious matters of memory, psychology, truth,
belief, meaning, love, life, and death. Nostalgia, childhood, games,
play, and sentimentality career headlong into the realms of kitsch, Pop,
and the history of the avant-garde, resulting in a delightful yet
challenging range of responses from the viewer, whether amusement,
camaraderie, joy, bemusement, outrage, disillusionment, or a call to
arms. Clegg is an artist with great energy, incredible spirit, and one
of the most engaging, curious, cryptic, and entertaining oeuvres
currently making waves in the world of art.
In many ways an exploration of the id, ego, and superego, Clegg's
practice plays out the struggle between our basic desires, our rational
minds, and the underlying mores that keep us in check. Not unlike
Freudian notions of the psyche, Clegg's practice articulates the battle
that takes place inside us all on a daily basis, spilling into the
outside world in myriad ways. It is a fight, yes, but it is play too.