The International 3 sign by Bob & Roberta Smith, 2004
Exhibitions   Artists   About   Contact   News
PAST SHOWS
31st Jul - 31st Jul 10

10th Jul - 30th Jul 10

1st May - 5th Jun 10

9th Apr - 11th Apr 10

4th Mar - 7th Mar 10

13th Feb - 20th Mar 10

14th Nov - 19th Dec 09

26th Sep - 31st Oct 09

25th Sep - 27th Sep 09

19th Jun - 18th Jul 09

8th Jun - 13th Jun 09

13th May - 17th May 09

24th Jan - 7th Mar 09

7th Nov - 13th Dec 08

30th Oct - 2nd Nov 08

9th Oct - 12th Oct 08

13th Jun - 14th Jun 08

28th Apr - 29th Aug 08

5th Apr - 31st May 08

23rd Feb - 15th Mar 08

17th Nov - 15th Dec 07

12th Oct - 15th Oct 07

27th Sep - 1st Oct 07

14th Jul - 4th Aug 07

19th May - 23rd Jun 07

24th Mar - 28th Apr 07

28th Oct - 25th Nov 06

13th Oct - 15th Oct 06

13th May - 10th Jun 06

28th Jan - 1st Apr 06

26th Nov - 23rd Dec 05

29th Oct - 20th Nov 05

20th Oct - 24th Oct 05

There is Always an Alternative: possibilities for art in the early nineties
10th Sep - 16th Oct 05

7th May - 5th Jun 05

 
There is Always an Alternative: possibilities for art in the early nineties
10th Sep - 16th Oct 05

Press Release

Dave Beech & Mark Hutchinson - Tim Brennan - Gareth James - Clive Sall / f.a.t. - Gillian Dyson - John Beagles - Deborah Holland - Dean Brannigan - Graham Ramsay - Lindsay Seers - Laura Emsley - Alison Marchant - Hayley Newman - Dan Mitchell - Giorgio Sadotti - Laurence Lane - Nick Crowe - Martin Vincent - David Mabb - Billy McCall - John Timberlake - Cornford and Cross - Brian Dawn Chalkley - Florian Zeyfang - Ward Shelley - Shaheen Merali - David Burrows - Adam Dant - Jeremy Deller - Chad McCail
 
With a performance by Gillian Dyson
 

There Is Always an Alternative articulates an alternative history of art practice and a history of alternative art practices around the early 1990s based on a political understanding of the position of the artist. The title derives from an inversion of one of Margaret Thatcher’s favourite ideological phrases, “there is no alternative”. This is a phrase used by people attempting to undermine whatever alternative there is and in that sense is always false and falsifying. On the contrary, there is always an alternative. There Is Always an Alternative explores models and possibilities for artistic practice that resist, undermine or otherwise oppose the closures, absences and exclusions in dominant art discourse and practice. It puts forward an alternative history of British art in the early 1990s and in so doing, provide a resource for all those practices seeking to confront the limitations, both arbitrary and ideological, upon what can be done now.

The artists shown are committed to a theoretical and political understanding of art practice and, on the whole, to a form of collectivity: conceiving of their individual practices in relation to the practices of others. This was a time when the possibility of forging alternative co-ordinates for art practice seemed a practical as well as theoretical possibility. The constellation of practices gathered together in this exhibition, informed by political analysis as well as aesthetic theory, presented a different model of artistic practice than that which came to be seen as dominant in Britain and elsewhere in the 90s. As always, things could have been different and still could be different. One of the techniques available to the status quo is to minimize or eliminate the sense of any alternative in the present or immediate future by obliterating the alternatives that existed in the past. The market is a very good mechanism for this sort of institutionalised selectivity. It is through recovering alternatives in the past, therefore, that we will inform and spur on alternatives in the future. There is Always an Alternative documents an under-represented array of radical practices from the early-90s in order to provide potential models of radical individual and collective art practice now and to come.

The project is curated around an overtly Marxist understanding of art and history, which is not to say that only committed Marxist artists will be shown and documented. Documenting a network of radical practices and expounding a theoretical understanding of radical art practice, There is Always an Alternative is focused around two exhibitions. The first exhibition at temporarycontemporary in London will be a survey of existing, or re-created, historical work. Artists will represent their own work and the work of those around them in the early 1990s. The second exhibition at The International 3 in Manchester, will act as a forum for current debates and ideas concerning radical, political and critical contemporary art. It will also be a response to the first exhibition. Documentation of the historical work in the first exhibition will act as a backdrop to this debate. Artists will participate in this second exhibition in direct response to these conditions of display. Focusing on collectivity and dialogue, the exhibition will change over its course.

Title
Gillian Dyson
Details
performance residue from opening event of There is Always an Alternative