Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Digital video still composite.

Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS (installation clip), 2021.

Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Photograph by Reece Straw.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Photograph by Reece Straw.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Photograph by Reece Straw.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Photograph by Reece Straw.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Performance documentation by Kyle Zeto.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Performance documentation by Kyle Zeto.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Performance documentation by Kyle Zeto.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Performance documentation by Kyle Zeto.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Performance documentation by Kyle Zeto.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Performance documentation by Kyle Zeto.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021, video still.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021, video still.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021, video still.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021, video still.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021, video still.
Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Digital video still composite.

Rebecca Lennon, THE KNOT COMMONS, 2021. Digital video still composite.

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Rebecca Lennon

THE KNOT COMMONS

15 – 31 October 2021

Dilston Grove

THE KNOT COMMONS is a new large-scale poly-vocal three channel video and surround sound composition with performance by Rebecca Lennon. It is the annual collaborative commission by Southwark Park Galleries and Matt's Gallery created especially for Dilston Gallery.

Originally planned for March 2020, the show was postponed, re-thought and re-designed over the successive national lockdowns. THE KNOT COMMONS became the second part in a series of works, following on from Liquid i at Primary, Nottingham in 2020/2021, building on themes explored there. Liquid i was accompanied by a text written by Sophie Jung. A new text by Rebecca Jagoe will be published alongside this exhibition.

The exhibition expands a two-part spatial composition of vocal loops, textual knots, and imagery inhabiting / moving around two different repurposed civic architectures, a school and a deconsecrated church. The work deals with urgent themes around finance, housing, the body, the voice and the porous nature of selfhood, combining complex and poetic themes arranged linguistically, sonically and visually in an immersive audio-visual assemblage. Characters are decked out in uniform black velour. Percussive vocal sounds, tics and hums build up spatial rhythms like an incantation. Entanglements of bodies unravel; public and private, human and nonhuman. An aerialist loops in air, mosquitoes spit blood in rhythms, mouths speak multiple voices, while others spit water like fountains.

A key point of departure is a story describing the removal of roof tiles from a house to allow water seepage, causing it to rot from the inside and become derelict. This body of video and sound describe and viscerally conjure this toxic seepage as a movement of liquid: into and out of a body carried by a mosquito; out of the drains of a house, filling the street due to an intrusion of Knotweed, out of the mouth in absence of a voice; into the body of the Vampire, via the demand of a melancholic thirst.

Lennon uses the image of planned dereliction as a way into thinking about ownership and its collapse. She departs, using the house as a stand-in for the body, to think about how the self is constituted physically and through language, how a voice might be allowed or denied its right to speak and how it may also be repurposed for self (and collective) care, a commons.

Performers, voices and characters in the video: Carl Gent, Jennifer Hodgson, Stella Kajombo, Rebecca Lennon, Chooc Ly Tan, Leon Dee and aerialist Mim Wheeler. Animated fountains by Carla Mackinnon.

LIQUID i the Knot Commons is a new body of work being developed by Rebecca Lennon with Matt's Gallery and Southwark Park Galleries in London, and Primary, Nottingham.

Rebecca Lennon is supported by an Arts Council England, Developing Your Creative Practice Grant. This exhibition is made possible thanks to Southwark Council, Arts Council England and Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.