Linder Sterling’s punk feminist collages give a British countryside art crawl a new edge
Launched in 2015, The Grand Tour celebrates the interwoven art, architecture, cultural heritage and landscape of Nottingham and Derbyshire. Since its inception, big-shot British male art stars like Simon Starling and Pablo Bronstein have helped put this UK missive into the international spotlight.
The countryside art crawl still offers an invigorating creative survey of the region, but the programming has taken a distinctly feminist twist for its third edition, courtesy of one artist in particular who is having a banner year: Linder. A double bill at Nottingham Contemporary and Chatsworth stars the British photomontage artist (full name Linder Sterling), who is also the latter’s first-ever artist resident.
Renowned for her punk/post-punk aesthetics, Linder reimagined the Chatsworth estate’s sumptuous digs in Derbyshire as a type of ‘sensorium’. Delving into the 500-year history of the stately home for ‘Her Grace Land’ (24 March – 21 October), the artist devised a series of multi-sensory ‘interventions’ that play out across the estate.
These range from ancient Roman-style incense made with flora sourced from the grounds to otherworldly audio works produced with sound bites captured within the Chatsworth’s hallowed halls. ‘Her Grace Land’ also includes Linder’s signature photomontages, as well as more subtle architctonic mediations, wherein the artist manipulates the light levels and scents of various halls, bedchambers, and lobbies, as part of an investigation of its accumulated history and memory.
Over at Nottingham Contemporary, meanwhile, Linder has performed something of an act of teleportation with ‘The House of Fame’ (24 March – 24 June), in keeping with her marked interest in the occult. Convened in collaboration with Nottingham Contemporary director Sam Thorne, Linder’s retrospective has been transformed into a heterogeneous, multi-artist affair that weaves 40 years of her work with a historical survey of unorthodox movements and influences on her practice since the 1600s.
Having spent so much time in the gilded surrounds of Chatsworth, it’s perhaps no surprise that ‘The House of Fame’ takes the politics and aesthetics of the domestic as its point of departure. Linder’s collaged album cover for the Buzzcocks’ 1977 single Orgasm Addict and a series of lingerie masks produced in the artist’s student days set the tone of the exhibition early on, quickly expanding to other artists.
The curatorial selection digs deep, ranging from the House of the Future (1956) by architects Alison and Peter Smithson; Mike Kelley’s Ectoplasm series that playfully explores spiritual contact next door; Chicago imagist Diane Simpson’s garment-like sculptures; and the work of lesser-known British surrealist Ithell Colquhoun. Finally, ‘The Abode of Sound’ in the fourth gallery gives a ‘solo show within a show’ to the unsung textile artist Moki Cherry, whose trippy tapestries from the 1970s get a long-overdue debut outside of her native Sweden.
Conceived as a ‘house of houses’, the Nottingham Contemporary exhibition is a celebration of the occult that is ‘less interested in presenting a historical account than paying tribute to an alternative way of thinking and its popular resurgence in the present’, says Linder. Pulling weird, wonderful, and never-before-seen artefacts from the Chatsworth’s archive, the exhibition allows spirituality and feminism — two ideas with a deeply interconnected history, according to Linder — to come together at last.
Aware of the male-dominated first two seasons of The Grand Tour, it’s also an effort towards cultivating a more diverse arts culture in the area. Linder’s twin bill adds a valuable lucidity to the programming, just as the region gears up for an uncertain post-Brexit future.
INFORMATION
The Grand Tour runs until 17 June. ‘Her Grace Land’ is on view at Chatsworth until 21 October. ‘The House of Fame’ is on view at Nottingham Contemporary until 24 June. For more information, visit The Grand Tour website, the Chatsworth website, and the Nottingham Contemporary website
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
-
A new Oxford Street pop-up celebrates IKEA's blue bags
IKEA's iconic blue bag gets its own pop-up concept store, the 'Hus of Frakta'.
By Smilian Cibic Published
-
Audemars Piguet and Kaws have created the Royal Oak Concept watch we didn't know we needed
The Audemars Piguet x Kaws Royal Oak Concept Tourbillon 'Companion' is slick wrist-worn art
By Thor Svaboe Published
-
A friendly rivalry coloured by kinship: Wendy Maruyama and Tom Loeser on their two-artist show
'I wanted to make furniture, just not traditional furniture, but weird furniture,' says Wendy Maruyama on ‘Colorama’, a two-artist show presented at design gallery Superhouse (until 11 January 2025)
By Gregory Han Published
-
The Turner Prize 2024 opens at Tate Britain
The Turner Prize 2024 shortlisted artists are Pio Abad, Claudette Johnson, Jasleen Kaur and Delaine Le Bas
By Hannah Silver Published
-
Peggy Guggenheim: ‘My motto was “Buy a picture a day” and I lived up to it’
Five years spent at her Sussex country retreat inspired Peggy Guggenheim to reframe her future, kickstarting one of the most thrilling modern-art collections in history
By Caragh McKay Published
-
Please do touch the art: enter R.I.P. Germain’s underground world in Liverpool
R.I.P. Germain’s ‘After GOD, Dudus Comes Next!’ is an immersive installation at FACT Liverpool
By Will Jennings Published
-
‘Regeneration and repair is a really important part of how I work’: Bharti Kher at Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Bharti Kher unveils the largest UK museum exhibition of her career at Yorkshire Sculpture Park
By Will Jennings Published
-
‘Mental health, motherhood and class’: Hannah Perry’s dynamic installation at Baltic
Hannah Perry's exhibition ’Manual Labour’ is on show at Baltic in Gateshead, UK, a five-part installation drawing parallels between motherhood and factory work
By Emily Steer Published
-
Francis Alÿs plots child play around the world at the Barbican
In Francis Alÿs' exhibition ‘Ricochets’ at London’s Barbican, the artist explores the universality of play, even in challenging situations
By Amah-Rose Abrams Published
-
At Glastonbury’s Shangri-La, activism and innovation meet
Glastonbury’s south-east corner is known for its after-dark entertainment but by day, there is a different story to tell
By Rhian Daly Published
-
Suzannah Pettigrew's 'tender and ghostly' new show at Surrealist photographer Lee Miller's former home in East Sussex
London-based artist Suzannah Pettigrew's photographic stills create a snapshot of her Sussex coast childhood, conjuring up a hallucinatory world of memory
By Mary Cleary Published