NOW ON SHOW AT WHITECHAPEL GALLERY, HIS WORK SINCE THE 1970S INCLUDES SOME OF
BRITAIN’S MOST ICONIC IMAGES OF RESISTANCE
~ Becky Haghpanah-Shirwan ~
Since the 1970s, Peter Kennard has produced some of Britain’s most iconic and
influential images of resistance and dissent. These have spanned his support for
the movements against the Vietnam War, Apartheid and nuclear weapons; the
alter-global and anti-war campaigns in the 2000s; and his ongoing commitment to
environmental activism and position on the present wars in Ukraine and Gaza.
His exhibition Archive of Dissent at Whitechapel Gallery, open until 19 January
2025, is repository of social and political history on its own. Showcasing five
decades of his work, it also explores a way of making art that has continuously
pushed against the status quo. In this interview, I talked to Peter about his
uncompromising visual practise.
You started painting at an early age. Can you explain what drew you to art in
the early days and then what galvanised you into producing art that was
politically engaged?
I started painting when I was about thirteen. Coal was banned when smokeless
fuel was introduced so the coal shed at the bottom of our flats was empty and I
turned it into a studio. I painted on bits of wood, card, metal, anything I
could find mainly from nearby bomb sites which were still there from the war. I
painted and drew small mainly figurative work and rushed through influences,
Bacon, Sutherland, Picasso, Kollwitz, Giacometti, Goya were all plundered for
techniques, materials and subject matter. I left school at sixteen and got a
scholarship to Byam Shaw School of Art, where I continued painting and in 1967
went on to the Slade School.
Peter Kennard, Whitechapel Gallery, July 2024
I became politically conscious through the anti-Vietnam War movement. A crucial
event for me in terms of my work was what’s become known as the Battle of
Grosvenor Square in March 1968, this big anti-war demo ended up in a violent
confrontation with the police in front of the American Embassy. I’d never
experienced the police including police horses seemingly on a rampage against
demonstrators. I suddenly wanted to find a way to make work that could relate to
the war, the protesters against war and to other struggles around the world, the
Civil rights movement in the US, the Anti-Apartheid movement etc. That’s when I
started using photography by ripping photographs from magazines and newspapers
which I copied onto 5X4 negatives and then sandwiched the negatives to create
composite images showing the wars, uprisings, protests, state violence, picket
lines etc.
At the Slade the big thing at the time was colour-field painting so my degree
show of work mainly showing violent protest and war was not appreciated by the
powers that be and was placed in the basement next to the gents bog. Nor was my
first street work much appreciated by the Slade. It was in 1970 consisting of
large prints of one of the four students protesting the Vietnam War who were all
shot dead by the Ohio National Guard at Kent State University. I fly posted big
prints up around London with a group of fellow Slade students in solidarity with
the US students. This image is the earliest placard in my new installation The
People’s University of the East End on show at the Whitechapel gallery.
It is this authenticity, in process and spirit, that is central to your work,
which presents a truth. How does the artist fight through the recent onslaught
of deep fakes and fake news to maintain this and remain a witness?
I think art maintains its integrity if it comes from a passion deep inside the
artist. Deep fakes, AI montages etc are more and more dangerous as they become
more and more authentic. But don’t forget that a hundred years ago Stalin
airbrushed Trotsky out of group photos of the Central Committee. The Stalin
School of Falsification, as it’s become known, was a precursor of what’s
happening now with AI. It’s always been possible for photos to be manipulated.
It’s the basis of photomontage that photos can be joined up to get to the truth
lurking behind the single image. But AI isn’t looking for a truth. You can cut a
photo of the Pentagon and place it in a photo of a bomb crater in Gaza. AI can
do that technically but the idea has to come from a human who is moved to create
this as a symbol of the horrific reality pounding Gaza 24/24. In my own recent
work ‘Boardroom’ I’ve tried to deconstruct the idea of photomontage by showing
images of oil company logos or drones projected through glass onto human faces.
This work is, in part, a response to our world of HD screens showing high-res
images with everything smoothed out, and leaving us as passive consumers. In
‘Boardroom’ nothing is hidden, the means of image making is foregrounded to show
the process which hopefully encourages critical thinking in the viewer.
Peter Kennard, Whitechapel Gallery, July 2024
In your new work, Double Exposure (2023) you integrated light via a Raspberry Pi
computer to make your first dynamic work. Can you speak more about your move
away from the ‘classic’ mode of photomontage in your later works? Evidently they
are produced for a gallery setting instead of a media platform.
In my recent work in my Whitechapel exhibition, ‘Double Exposure’ and
‘Boardroom’ which were first supported in their making and shown at
A/POLITICAL last year I’ve tried to make work that uses lights and
three-dimensional structures to break down and expose the elements that were
originally connected together in my photomontages. In ‘Double Exposure’ I’ve
collaborated with the technologist Nigel Brown using Raspberry Pi computers to
flash lights on and off behind the stocks and shares pages of the Financial
Times. When a light flashes on the page of the FT it shows a montage of police
violence, climate breakdown, war etc. It’s revealing what’s behind the serried
ranks of numbers on the page, a conjunction of image and text that is never
shown together in the press. It’s trying to create a form of photomontage in
action, that connects obscene profit with its obscene result.
The other work ‘Boardroom’, mentioned previously, contains studding of different
lengths screwed into salvaged wooden boards with images of oil company logos,
drones, crosshairs etc. attached to glass so that they project onto faces that
have no mouths. The structures are all exposed so that you see the image and its
projection. It’s deconstructing montage so that nothing is hidden, all elements
are up for grabs.
Both works are trying to go beyond the flat screen of computers that we all
spend our days staring at to engage the viewer in a more physical way that
changes perspective as you view it from different angles. In a sense both this
work and ‘Double Exposure’ are attempts to make gallery-based work that can
counteract our total reliance on the computer screen. They are both
intentionally difficult to look at compared with the montages I’ve made in the
past. By using crude metal supports that are not sleek and smooth I want people
to engage with the work through its materiality and feel how the technology of
war and the company logos of climate breakdown are projecting onto humanity.
I’ve always thought in the past that galleries would rather turn a blind eye to
political art which is why I’ve always made work that I feel can stand up to the
scrutiny of the gallery setting and then fight to get it shown. In my current
exhibition ‘Archive of Dissent’ at the Whitechapel Gallery, which is a
remarkable gallery with a radical past and now a radical present, I’ve noticed a
much more engaged response to my work than before. This is due to the times we
live in, where the lies and power structures of the so-called land of the free
are so blatantly obvious that they are in our minds all the time. We see
everyday videos of some of the thousands of children dead under the rubble of
Gaza and we know of the weekly arms shipments from the USA to Israel with the
compliance of our Labour Party.
Peter Kennard, Whitechapel Gallery, July 2024
Could you speak more about your personal politics? Your practice has spanned
over 50 years and so you have seen governments come and go. Seeing that a large
part of your artwork was produced as a critique of Conservative politics, do you
find art-making more challenging when you’re not the opposition?
I am a committed internationalist, concerned with inhumanity, poverty, racism
and war wherever it is, so the fact we now have the Labour Party in power does
not make a jot of difference to my art practise, I believe they will continue
the Neo-Liberal onslaught on the poor. the working class and the climate
protesters that the Tories brought in. That almost feels guaranteed with Starmer
leading a party that will not call for a ceasefire in Gaza. I will just continue
to express my outrage by all means possible. I produced some anti – nuclear
weapons posters for the Labour Party for a short time in the early 1980’s when
almost by mistake they were calling for unilateral disarmament, it didn’t last.
I only ever joined the Labour Party when Jeremy Corbyn was leader. Suddenly
there was a chink of light in the Labour wall of false promises. I left the
party when he was shat on, both by the Labour Party and the establishment press,
in the end being thrown out of the party.
Being so outspoken regarding the dire reality of UK politics, you have managed
to achieve what many politically engaged artists have not been able to – a voice
on the streets and also institutional recognition. How do you think your work
has been able to transgress the more traditional nature of these cultural
venues? Have you ever come under any pressure to conform to external pressures?
I’ve always been concerned about getting my work out through as many channels as
possible, be it postcards, badges, t-shirts, books, posters, newspapers,
museums, art galleries. We’re living in times of great emergency, climate
catastrophe, Gaza, Ukraine, the poverty created by neo-liberalism and on and on…
For me that calls for an art that can communicate both inside and outside the
structures created especially for showing art. The official art world has only
recently opened up to showing artists of colour and women artists but if you
cross an unspoken line there can be trouble. I’ve had work censored in the past
for being too direct and that’s a good reason to try and show in art galleries,
it pushes the institutions into stating their position on subjects they’d rather
brush under the carpet, so they don’t offend their sponsors.
As state money for the arts has been reduced or in some cases has dried up all
together sponsorship has become key to survival for a number of arts
institutions, but it always comes with strings attached in the sense that the
artist’s work should not name names. I’ve only found a few institutions that
would support the making of my work. In the 1980s it was the Greater London
Council under Ken Livingstone who supported the production of my posters against
nuclear weapons and were then sent around the country. The Imperial War Museum
supported new work for my Retrospective Unofficial War Artist in 1995.
More recently, it is A/POLITICAL which is the first organisation I can think of
in Britain that is actually committed to supporting and collecting work that is
dissident to the status quo and is overtly political without being propagandist.
It’s a vitally important organisation because it’s the only arts-based
organisation where radical political ideas are central to its thinking and where
artists and thinkers are encouraged to pursue projects that would be considered
dangerous to the status quo of other arts institutions.
Peter Kennard, Whitechapel Gallery, July 2024
Having the accolade of being the first Professor of Political Art in the
country, lecturing at the Royal College of Arts from 1995, you have maintained
and nurtured the younger generation of engaged artists for nearly three decades.
How did you reconcile your life-long solidarity with the working class, with
your teaching at a University that is prohibitive for many?
I’ve considered teaching to have been an important part of my practise as an
artworker. Teaching art is a complex business especially as the art schools have
been and are being under severe attack from the state. When I first began
teaching the students didn’t have large fees to pay and also got small grants.
It meant poorer students could come on courses and the social and class mix
which resulted created a thriving experimental environment where the students
could really let rip and go down alleyways of thought and making. Now it’s more
difficult for students to work so freely as modular systems and marking projects
have been imported onto art courses and the organic nature of making art is
poured into a structure that is inherently against the free space that an art
school should inhabit.
Art schools are not just about nurturing the next generation of artists (as we
know so much of the best rock music has come from ex-art students) they are
places where young people who don’t feel they quite fit into the 9-5 job machine
can find an alternative way of being in the world. That’s why the Tories have
cut off so much funding to art from primary schools up to universities they’re
shit scared of what they see as the incipient anarchy of art and artists that
are not under their iron fisted control.
Do you think this environment is still a useful and effective space for protest,
and for artists who want to produce art that’s against the grain?
While maintaining a half time job at the RCA I’ve always gone around the country
giving talks and tutorials at all sorts of colleges and art schools. I still
find that working class students are getting loans and becoming art students,
often having to work evenings and weekends to keep going. It’s tough, but they
are determined to find a voice through creating something, be it painting,
sculpture, performance, music, writing etcetera, anything and everything that is
against the grain of our corporate landscape.
Peter Kennard, Whitechapel Gallery, July 2024
I show my work to students but never foist on them the idea that their own work
should be explicitly political. I introduce them to histories of political and
social art that are not fashionable so often are not part of the curriculum but
I’m totally against wanting to get students to make a certain kind of art. It’s
more about them finding what it is they feel passionately about and then going
for it. No-one gives a fuck about artists making work or not making work, it’s
totally about the compulsion to do it and finding a way to continue after
college. I always get shocked when people refer to my ‘career’, I’ve never
thought of it as a career, it’s more a compulsion and teaching students is
enriching when they themselves find ways to express their own compulsion.
Peter Kennard: Archive of Dissent. Whitechapel Gallery. Closes 19 January 2025.
The post Peter Kennard: “My art erupts from outrage” appeared first on Freedom
News.