9 May 2017 — Announcement

Scotland + Venice unveils Rachel Maclean’s Spite Your Face

Rachel Maclean Spite Your Face Photo by Patrick Rafferty

The Scotland + Venice partnership today unveils Spite Your Face, a major new film commission by Edinburgh College of Art educated artist Rachel Maclean for the 57th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia.

Curated by Alchemy Film and Arts, in partnership with Talbot Rice Gallery and the University of Edinburgh, Maclean’s modern-day, dark Venetian fairytale is presented as a large-scale portrait projection at the altar of the deconsecrated church, Chiesa di Santa Caterina, Cannaregio.

Installation-Spite Your Face Photo by Patrick Rafferty

Referencing the Italian folk-tale The Adventures of Pinocchio, Maclean’s new commission offers a powerful critique of contemporary society, critiquing the underlying fears and desires that characterise the zeitgeist we find ourselves in today. Spite Your Face is a tale across two worlds – with a bright, glittering and ordered upper world, and a warped, dirty, impoverished lower world – where the lure of wealth, power and adoration entices a destitute young boy into the shimmering riches of the kingdom above.

Spite Your Face scenes

Rachel Maclean, artist, says:

“With this new film I set out to respond to significant changes in the political climate in the UK and abroad over the last 12 months – in particular the divisive campaigns in the lead up to the Brexit vote and the US Presidential election. These events have been central in heralding a new post-truth era, where politicians feel free to say what they want to help them gain popular support, with little regard for factual accuracy.

“The Venetian context also inspired my new work, drawing ideas and images from the city’s history. In particular, the architecture of the venue (a dramatic deconsecrated church) emphasises the topsy-turvy world depicted in the film, with the projection installed vertically in the alter space, rather than the traditional horizontal film format.

“This new Scotland + Venice commission is a darkly comic moral tale, depicting a post-truth dystopia where the world is turned on its head, leaving the characters untethered to any sense of right and wrong, truth and lies.”

Spite Your Face characters

The story, conveyed by a continuous film loop where the beginning seamlessly connects to the end, is told through the lives of two central characters, both acted and directed by Maclean: PIC, the central (English-speaking) protagonist who starts off as a young boy and grows to maturity during the film; and a Madonna-like figure (Italian-speaking, English subtitles) who embodies the moral compass. A third character – a manipulative salesman (also played by Maclean) – journeys with PIC through his moral corruption and corresponding rise to celebrity and power.

Alchemy Film & Arts worked with the Glasgow-based production company, Barry Crerar to produce the commission, involving studio based green-screen techniques, custom prosthetics, costume, and voice actors.

Richard Ashrowan, Curator, Alchemy Film & Arts, said:

“Maclean is known for her bold originality and unflinching ability to satirise the economies of desire and wish fulfilment inherent in contemporary life. In this new film, she has turned her penetrating gaze to the nebulous question of truth, its relationship to current political discourse, greed and the will to power. It questions our fundamental desire for a better life, while asking which brand of truth we will choose in the pursuit of an ideal life.

“Maclean is an artist whose work speaks powerfully to our generation, with unsettling clarity and an uncanny astuteness, while reflecting Scotland’s own energised spirit of political reinvention.”

Amanda Catto, Head of Visual Arts at Creative Scotland, on behalf of the Scotland + Venice Partnership, said:

“The Scotland + Venice partners are delighted to be presenting Rachel Maclean’s remarkable new film work at this year’s Venice Biennale. Rachel possesses a unique and compelling vision and Venice offers a significant international platform for her work.

“Founded in 2003 the Scotland + Venice project continues to raise the profile of Scotland as a dynamic and evolving centre for the production, promotion and presentation of contemporary art. We are excited that this new commission will reach audiences from across the world and we look forward to welcoming visitors to the exhibition at the Chiesa di Santa Caterina from May to November 2017.”

In a unique partnership, the 2017 exhibitions for Scotland + Venice and Wales in Venice will both be shown in Scotland and Wales following their presentation at the 57th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia. With support from Art Fund, Rachel Maclean: Spite Your Face will be exhibited at Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh (February – April 2018) and at Chapter, Cardiff (October 2018 – January 2019); and James Richards: Music for the gift will be exhibited at Chapter (June – September 2018) and Collective, Edinburgh (January – March 2019).

Scotland + Venice is supported by Creative Scotland through National Lottery funding.

Media Contacts

Victoria Mitchell, SUTTON PR
Email: [email protected]
Tel: +44 (0)207 183 3577
Mobile: +44(0)759 521 7616

Notes to Editors

The Exhibition Guide, with further details on Scotland + Venice’s presentation, can be found at the venue or downloaded here (PDF).

Based in Glasgow, Rachel Maclean (1987) was educated at Edinburgh College of Art where she completed her BA in Drawing and Painting in 2009. Rachel premiered a new commission, Again and Again and Again at Frieze Art Fair as part of Frieze Film 2016.

Maclean has risen to significant recent acclaim, with major, solo UK exhibitions Rachel Maclean: Wot u 🙂 about? at HOME, Manchester and Tate Britain, 2016-17. Maclean graduated in 2009 and her work came to public attention in New Contemporaries later that year. Since then, her work A Whole New World won the prestigious Margaret Tait Award in 2013, she has twice been shortlisted for the Jarman Award, and has achieved widespread critical praise for Feed Me (2016) in British Art Show 8. Web: www.rachelmaclean.com Twitter: @Maclean_Rachel

Current and upcoming exhibitions include: Feed Me at The Dick Institute in Kilmarnock 20 May–August 2017; Ars 17 – Hello World! at Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki, 31 March 2017–14 January 2018. Recent exhibitions include: Wot U 🙂 About?, Tate Britain (2016-17); Wot U 🙂 About?, HOME (2016-17); We Want Data (2016), Artpace, Texas; British Art Show 8 (2015-17), Ok, You’ve Had Your Fun, Casino Luxembourg (2015), Please, Sir…, Rowing, London, (2014); The Weepers, Comar, Mull, (2014); Happy & Glorious, CCA, Glasgow, (2014). Recent screenings include: Feed Me at Athens and Luxembourg Film Festival (2016); Moving Pictures, British Council and Film London, (2015-16); Lolcats, Impakt Festival, Utrecht, The Netherlands, (2014).

Scotland + Venice is a partnership between Creative Scotland, the National Galleries of Scotland and the British Council Scotland.

14 art students have been selected from six Scottish art colleges for the Scotland + Venice Professional Development Programme. Participants will spend 4 weeks in Venice sharing time between invigilation of the Scotland + Venice presentation and independent study and research. Meet the students here: https://scotlandandvenice.com/scotland-venice-partnership-announces-participants-in-the-2017-professional-development-programme/

Creative Scotland is the public body that supports the arts, screen and creative industries across all parts of Scotland on behalf of everyone who lives, works or visits here. We distribute funding provided by the Scottish Government and the National Lottery. Web: www.creativescotland.com Twitter: @creativescots Facebook: @CreativeScotland

The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) looks after one of the world’s finest collections of Western art ranging from the Middle Ages to the present day. These holdings include the National Collection of Scottish art which is displayed in an international context. Last year the NGS welcomed over 2 million visitors from Scotland and the rest of the world to our three Galleries sited in Edinburgh. These include the Scottish National Gallery, the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery. www.nationalgalleries.org

British Council Scotland‘s mission is to build long-term international relationships and trust between the people of Scotland and other countries through the exchange of ideas, knowledge and information in the arts and education. Our involvement in the arts arena stretches back to 1947 when we helped to found the Edinburgh International Festival and every year we continue to work on new and exciting cultural projects connecting Scotland and the world. https://scotland.britishcouncil.org/

Founded in 2010, Alchemy Film & Arts celebrates experimental film and artists’ moving image culture in Scotland. Its annual Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival, now approaching its eighth edition 1-4 May, 2018, is produced in partnership with Heart of Hawick in the Scottish Borders. Alchemy Film & Arts also raises the profile of Scottish based artists internationally through developmental projects for experimental film and artists’ moving image, including artists’ filmmaking residencies, filmmaking symposia, international and rural touring programmes, and community filmmaking initiatives. Web: www.alchemyfilmfestival.org.uk Twitter: @alchemyfilmfest Facebook @alchemyfilmfestival

Talbot Rice is the University of Edinburgh’s public art gallery. As the project’s creative and academic partner, Talbot Rice Gallery will host Rachel Maclean’s work from the Venice Biennale in early 2018. Founded in the early 1970s, Talbot Rice has an influential national and international reputation founded on its exhibition and integrated education programmes. In the last decade the Gallery has curated exhibitions with some of the most influential artists in the world, including: Luc Tuymans, Jane and Louise Wilson, Joseph Kosuth, Jenny Holzer, Lucy McKenzie, Alasdair Gray, Mark Dion, Rosemarie Trockel, and Tim Rollins. Web: www.ed.ac.uk/talbot-rice Twitter: @talbotrice75 Facebook @talbotricegallery