David Chalmers Alesworth, (A.R.B.S.) (born 1957 in Wimbledon,
Surrey)
is a UK-based
dual national
Multiple/dual citizenship (or multiple/dual nationality) is a legal status in which a person is concurrently regarded as a national or citizen of more than one country under the laws of those countries. Conceptually, citizenship is focused on t ...
artist, who divides his time between
Bristol
Bristol () is a city, ceremonial county and unitary authority in England. Situated on the River Avon, it is bordered by the ceremonial counties of Gloucestershire to the north and Somerset to the south. Bristol is the most populous city in ...
and
Pakistan
Pakistan ( ur, ), officially the Islamic Republic of Pakistan ( ur, , label=none), is a country in South Asia. It is the world's fifth-most populous country, with a population of almost 243 million people, and has the world's second-lar ...
. Trained originally as a sculptor in the UK, he moved to Pakistan in 1987
and engaged with the popular visual culture of South Asia and with urban crafts such as
truck decoration. He teaches art in Pakistan at various institutions including until recently the
Beaconhouse National University
Beaconhouse National University (BNU) is a private liberal arts university located in Lahore, in the province of Punjab, Pakistan.[Lahore
Lahore ( ; pnb, ; ur, ) is the second most populous city in Pakistan after Karachi and 26th most populous city in the world, with a population of over 13 million. It is the capital of the province of Punjab where it is the largest city ...]
.,
Biography
Alesworth studied art at the
Wimbledon School of Art in the tradition of late
Constructivism
Constructivism may refer to:
Art and architecture
* Constructivism (art), an early 20th-century artistic movement that extols art as a practice for social purposes
* Constructivist architecture, an architectural movement in Russia in the 1920s a ...
and won the prestigious ''Stanley Picker Fellowship'' at
Kingston University
, mottoeng = "Through Learning We Progress"
, established = – gained University Status – Kingston Technical Institute
, type = Public
, endowment = £2.3 m (2015)
, ...
. He then took up a teaching assignment at the
Glasgow School of Art
The Glasgow School of Art (GSA; gd, Sgoil-ealain Ghlaschu) is a higher education art school based in Glasgow, Scotland, offering undergraduate degrees, post-graduate awards (both taught and research-led), and PhDs in architecture, fine art, an ...
. His encounter with Pakistani culture, especially truck art, in the early 1980s opened up his practice to a range of new materials and he moved to Karachi, Pakistan in 1987.
In 2005 Alesworth moved to
Lahore
Lahore ( ; pnb, ; ur, ) is the second most populous city in Pakistan after Karachi and 26th most populous city in the world, with a population of over 13 million. It is the capital of the province of Punjab where it is the largest city ...
,
Pakistan
Pakistan ( ur, ), officially the Islamic Republic of Pakistan ( ur, , label=none), is a country in South Asia. It is the world's fifth-most populous country, with a population of almost 243 million people, and has the world's second-lar ...
, and took up a teaching position at Beaconhouse National University in the School of Visual Art (SVAD, BNU) where he taught until May 2015, then relocating to the UK. He currently maintains a studio in Bristol and works between the UK and Pakistan. He is married to the Pakistani artist
Huma Mulji
Huma Mulji (born 1970 in Karachi) is a Pakistani contemporary artist. Her works are in the collections of the Saatchi Gallery, London and the Asia Society Museum. She received the Abraaj Capital Art Prize in 2013.
Life
Huma Mulji was born in ...
.
In 2014 he was represented in the 8th Berlin Biennale at the
Dahlem Museum Berlin curated by Juan Gaitan and at the inaugural exhibition at the new
Agha Khan Museum in Toronto, in ''The Garden of Ideas'', curated b
Sharmini Pereira.
He was short-listed for the
Victoria and Albert Museum
The Victoria and Albert Museum (often abbreviated as the V&A) in London is the world's largest museum of applied arts, decorative arts and design, housing a permanent collection of over 2.27 million objects. It was founded in 1852 and nam ...
's fourth edition of the Jameel Prize in 2016.
Art and exhibits
Over the years, Alesworth has examined the conventions and visual codes of Pakistani society and of urban life in particular. His exhibits have displayed a wide range of formal influences from contemporary mass culture to the purism of late Constructivism. Many of these themes were evident in his versions of missiles and the very English teddy bear toys, displayed at the Canvas gallery (
Karachi
Karachi (; ur, ; ; ) is the most populous city in Pakistan and 12th most populous city in the world, with a population of over 20 million. It is situated at the southern tip of the country along the Arabian Sea coast. It is the former c ...
) in 2002.
Installations and Public Art
He started working with truck artists in the mid-to-late 1990s and produced several acclaimed installations, conceived in collaboration with Durriya Kazi. Through these collaborations and working with these craftsmen, he produced installations or interactive sites, such as ''Heart Mahal'', ''Very Sweet Medina'' and ''Promised Lands (Arz-e-Mauood)'' which generated substantial interest at local and international showings and cultivated a renewed attention towards cultural politics and aesthetics of cinema hoardings, truck art, bazaar artefacts, and commercial sign paintings.
Probes
Where most of his practices were based loosely around decorative flourishes of the urban bazaars, his central themes have remained
environmental degradation and
nuclear proliferation influencing works like ''Two Bombs Kiss'' in 1993.
His series of comical missile sculptures developed out of concern for the induction of nuclear weapons in Pakistan. The nuclear tests in April 1998 had become an iconic symbol in Pakistani streets and images of the
Ghauri missile were painted atop trucks and walls all over the city. Models of the missile were displayed as sculptures across town. David referred to his latest work as a continuation of an enduring enquiry and celebration of Pakistan's urban street culture and positioned it as part celebration of the material and process and part critique of the dubious and potentially disastrous aspiration to weaponise the nation.
The exhibition had a companion show with Alesworth's take on the teddy bear, where he unpacked this globalised icon in numerous ways. The teddy bears were translated into welded, riveted and soldered steel plate with
polka-dot
Red polka dots on a yellow background
Girl wearing polka dot dress
Polish ceramics
German ceramics
Polka dot is a pattern consisting of an array of large filled circles of the same size.
Polka dots are commonly seen on children's clothing, ...
s and displayed in public places similar to the missiles.
The 'Teddy's Bears' reference both their origin in American political history and their connotation of the restraint of power and the toys of a war child; this in the context of the American and Western powers interventions in Afghanistan over the last decades.
Textile Interventions
Since 2005 Alesworth's work has been substantially engaged with the post-colonial, in large part due to his relocation to the historic city of Lahore which is also known as the ''City of Gardens''. In this period he has created a number of works based upon the oriental carpet which he has termed ''textile interventions''. Over the last decade his work has been predominately organised around ideas arising from ''The Garden''. However this has been a very expanded ideation of the garden, more of the ''
global forest'' of which we are all a part or as ''
nature and culture''
than of the urban garden, but that too. He has visited the Botanical Garden as a concentration camp of exotic aliens, imprisoned in an act of cultural cleansing (Linz : 2007). The post-colonial garden in the video work "''Joank''" 2008, several public botanical interventions in Berlin, 2009–2010 and botanical taxonomy in ''The Garden of Babel'' 2009. Also ideas of garden perfection in the textile works ''Garden Palimpsest'' 2010 and ''Hyde Park, Kashan 1862'' of 2011 amongst others. He takes the garden as his key metaphor with which to probe humanity's culturally specific relationships with the natural world and toward understanding nature more as a social problem.
Citations
{{DEFAULTSORT:Alesworth, David Chalmers
1957 births
Living people
20th-century English male artists
21st-century English male artists
20th-century Pakistani male artists
21st-century Pakistani male artists
Alumni of Kingston University
Alumni of Wimbledon College of Arts
Academic staff of Beaconhouse National University
English expatriates in Pakistan
People educated at St John's School, Leatherhead