Céline Condorelli
  • Installation view, ‘Corps à Corps’, Institute of Modern Art, 2017. Photography: Carl Warner. In view (l-r): Céline Condorelli, ‘Alocasia Brisbanensis’, 2017; ‘Epilogue’, 2017.

  • Installation view, ‘Corps à Corps’, Institute of Modern Art, 2017. Photography: Carl Warner. In view (l-r): Céline Condorelli, ‘Alocasia Brisbanensis’, 2017; ‘Epilogue’, 2017; ‘Average Spatial Composition 2’, 2015/17.

  • Installation view, ‘Corps à Corps’, Institute of Modern Art, 2017. Photography: Carl Warner. In view: Céline Condorelli, ‘Models for a Qualitative Society’, 2016.

  • Installation view, ‘Corps à Corps’, Institute of Modern Art, 2017. Photography: Carl Warner. In view (l-r): Céline Condorelli, ‘Average Spatial Composition 2’, 2015/17; ‘Horror of Air Conditioning’, 2016; ‘Afterimage 3’, 2016; ‘How Things Appear, after Carlo Scarpa’, 2016.

  • Installation view, ‘Corps à Corps’, Institute of Modern Art, 2017. Photography: Carl Warner. In view (l-r): Céline Condorelli, ‘Horror of Air Conditioning’, 2016; ‘Afterimage 3’, 2016; ‘How Things Appear, after Carlo Scarpa’, 2016.

  • Installation view, ‘Corps à Corps’, Institute of Modern Art, 2017. Photography: Jaala Alex. In view: Céline Condorelli, ‘Á Droite et à Gauche (Sans Lunettes) [On the Right and on the Left (Without Glasses)]’, 2016.

  • Installation view, ‘Corps à Corps’, Institute of Modern Art, 2017. Photography: Jaala Alex. In view: Céline Condorelli, ‘Additionals’, 2012/2017.

  • Installation view, ‘Corps à Corps’, Institute of Modern Art, 2017. Photography: Jaala Alex. In view: Céline Condorelli, ‘bau bau bau’, 2015.

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Céline Condorelli

6 May–15 July 20176 May–15 Jul 2017

#CelineCondorelli

This is the first solo exhibition in Australia by London-based artist Céline Condorelli. Her practice draws on her architecture background and extensive research into the history and theory of exhibition design. Condorelli treats the IMA spaces, both indoor and outdoor, as case-studies in what an exhibition can be, creating diverse environments where everything from climate to furniture are integral features. As you make your way through each space, you will feel the wind on your face, be invited to play with past and future playgrounds, and, through a new video installation, be transported into fifteen disparate contexts where Condorelli’s works have served as support structures.

Launching in July, a new garden is being developed for the IMA’s courtyard by Condorelli with Pete Shields and Dirk Yates. The project is a co-commission by the IMA and the 11th Gwangju Biennale, with the support of the Keir Foundation. This immersive work will provide shade and seating for visitors amongst native and naturalised plant species, and propose the garden as exhibition. Throughout the exhibition, a scale model of the garden is presented in the IMA Gallery Shop.

Artist Bio
Céline Condorelli

Céline Condorelli (CH, IT, UK) is a London-based artist; she is currently Professor at NABA (Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti) Milan, and one of the founding directors of Eastside Projects, Birmingham, UK; she is the author and editor of Support Structures published by Sternberg Press (2009).

Recent exhibitions include Gwangju Biennale, Liverpool Biennial, Sydney Biennial, and Concrete Distractions, Kunsthalle Lissabon (2016), bau bau, HangarBicocca, Milan, IT (2015), Céline Condorelli, Chisenhale Gallery, UK, Positions, Van Abbemuseum, NL, including the publication The Company She Keeps, with Bookworks (2014). Previous exhibitions include bau bau, Museum of Contemporary Art, Leipzig, curating Puppet Show, Eastside Projects, Gävle Konstcentrum, and Grundy Art Gallery (2014), Additionals, Project Art Centre, Dublin, Ireland, Things That Go Without Saying, Grazer Kunstverein, Austria, The Parliament, ‘Archive of Disobedience’, Castello di Rivoli, Italy (2013), Surrounded by the Uninhabitable, SALT Istanbul (2012).

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The Institute of Modern Art acknowledges the traditional custodians of the land upon which the IMA now stands, the Jagera, Yuggera, Yugarapul, and Turrbal people. We offer our respect to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the first artists of this country. In the spirit of allyship, the IMA will continue to work with First Nations people to celebrate, support, and present their immense past, present, and future contribution to artistic practice and cultural expression.

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