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Hailing from Portland, Oregon, and based in New York, American artist Jessi Reaves’ practice freely traverses the realms of art and design, smudging the lines between sculpture and furniture. Reaves studied painting at the Rhode Island School of Design, originally joining the celebrated institute to study furniture design before changing her specialism. It was while working as an upholsterer in a New York studio full of scrap materials discarded during the process of furniture making that Reaves’ technique as an artist was sparked.

Jessi Reaves, Going out in style, 2019 at Herald St, 43 Museum St. Installation view.

London gallery Herald St hosts Reaves’ latest solo show, Going out in style, the artist’s second exhibition at the gallery, now open and running until 25 January 2020. Reaves presents a series of new works, fascinating and contradictory, never quite fitting squarely into categorisation. A piece of fabric resembling a slipcover, typically intended as a protective sheath, is here gaping with holes and draped over a deep rust-coloured container; wooden salad bowls are placed as supports underneath a glass table-top literally folding the role of the table under its hood like an engine.

Jessi Reaves, Going out in style, 2019 at Herald St, 43 Museum St. Installation view.

‘Scrap jacket chair’ plays with this notion, employing the platform as a museological device which, in most instances, prohibits the viewer from interacting with the object on display, elevating it, quite literally, above and beyond the status of a functional object. Here, Reaves transforms this into a gesture of invitation as the platform is used to raise the chair to the proper height for sitting. The platform is put to work again as a dramatic architectural intervention in the gallery space; creating a carpeted ziggurat structure reminiscent of the lush sunken interiors of Paul Rudolph. The platform acts as an elaborate framing device, surrounding the gallery’s walled-in fireplace and drawing our attention to its obsolescence. In its prior iteration, the fireplace would have represented the functional core of the household, now blocked off it is rendered useless.

Jessi Reaves, Going out in style, 2019 at Herald St, 43 Museum St. Installation view.

Reaves often hijacks iconic forms from the design tradition and redistributes them across her works, manifesting as recurring motifs that become absorbed into her own vernacular. In doing so, the boundary between stylistic fad and avant-garde design is kept playfully porous. Various modifications of Isamu Noguchi’s seminal Akari lamps, for example, are often used as the skeletal forms across which more ephemeral contemporary design objects, in this case cheap statement T-shirts, are stretched – adorned with forcefully peppy slogans like “Killin it” and “Stop and smell the rosé”. In other works, pre-existing design forms such as the Adirondack chair, found in practically every back yard across the United States, are simply inserted into the works as readymades.

Jessi Reaves, Going out in style, 2019 at Herald St, 43 Museum St. Installation view.

Reaves’ complex assemblages leave us with a persistent feeling of cognitive dissonance; her seemingly glamorous silhouettes, with their elaborate detailing, eventually reveal themselves to be roughly hewn and formed of a mottled, crusty wood- glue and sawdust mixture. Consider the elegant, trumpeting form of the datura flower, a motif repeated in Reaves’ work, seen here suspended, up-side down, from complex grid-like structures and cascading over the wiry frame of the lampshade – a seductive plant that grows uncontrollably like a weed and, if breathed in, may induce nightmares.



Jessi Reaves, Going out in style, at Herald St, 43 Museum St, WC1A 1LY | Open until 25 January 2020



Installation views via Herald St

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