Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art

Hayward Gallery, 20 February – 20 April 1992

Jenny Holzer, Selections from Truisms and The Survival Series (1992) © 2018 Jenny Holzer, member Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ DACS, London. Installation view: Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992. Photo: Edward Woodman (1992) by Jenny HolzerHayward Gallery

Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art was a major international exhibition of contemporary art that brought together 23 artists from around the world to explore the idea of ‘collective memory’, as well as ‘private and public lives’, ‘tradition and innovation’, and ‘the body and technology’.

Reading Room, Aldo Rossi. Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992. Photo: Edward Woodman (1992) by Aldo RossiHayward Gallery

The exhibition was selected by a committee consisting of Lynne Cooke, Curator at the DIA Center for the Arts, New York; Bice Curiger, Editor of the Swiss-based art quarterly Parkett; and Greg Hilty, then an Exhibition Organiser at Southbank Centre.

Internal Memo about 'International Contemporary Exhibition' Internal Memo about 'International Contemporary Exhibition' (1990) by Hayward GalleryHayward Gallery

A large-scale international exhibition of contemporary art at the Hayward Gallery was first proposed in 1990. In one of these early proposal, the selectors stated that ‘the artists on whom we want to focus do not represent a movement or a style, but rather a sensibility and a depth of engagement with the vernacular’, and drew attention to the way that the artists they wished to exhibit ‘remained on the cutting edge of contemporary art practice’, while making work that ‘had popular appeal’, could be ‘humorous’ and was often ‘spectacular’.

Installation View: Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992. Photo: Edward Woodman (1992) by Hayward GalleryHayward Gallery

The exhibition – which took place across the entire Hayward Gallery – was designed by Italian architect Aldo Rossi, who had written on the subject of collective memory in his 1966 publication The Architecture of the City.

Mike Kelley, Written in the Wind (1991). Installation View: Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 (1992) by Mike KelleyHayward Gallery

The 23 artists in Doubletake were: Stephan Balkenhol, Sophie Calle, Saint Claire Cemin, Peter Fischli/David Weiss, Katharina Fritsch, Jeff Koons, Glenn Ligon, Christian Marclay, Julio Galán, Robert Gober, Andreas Gursky, Ann Hamilton, Gary Hill, Jenny Holzer, Narelle Jubelin, Mike Kelley, Jon Kessler, Juan Muñoz, Simon Patterson, Philip Taaffe, Boyd Webb, Tim Rollins + K.O.S. and Rachel Whiteread.

Jon Kessler, The Millennium Machine (1992). Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992. Photo: Edward Woodman (1992) by Jon KesslerHayward Gallery

Jon Kessler's The Millennium Machine (1992) on one of Hayward Gallery's sculpture terraces.

Boyd Webb, Untitled (1992). Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992. Photo: Edward Woodman (1992) by Boyd WebbHayward Gallery

Doubletake spilled out beyond the walls of the Hayward Gallery thanks to a collaboration with the commissioning body Artangel. A number of works were placed along the River Thames between Westminster Bridge and Blackfriars, while others took place on the radio, or in Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall.

Juan Muñoz, Monument (1992). Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992. Photo: Edward Woodman (1992) by Juan MuñozHayward Gallery

Juan Muñoz's Monument (1992) on the South Bank of the Thames.

Figure on a Buoy (1992), Stephan Balkenhol. Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992. Photo: Edward Woodman (1992) by Stephan BalkenholHayward Gallery

Stephan Balkenhol’s larger than life-sized wooden figure of a man was placed on a buoy the middle of the River Thames.

Polaroids of Stephan Balkenhol’s Figure on a Buoy (1992), Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 (1992) by Hayward GalleryHayward Gallery

Diagrams for Stephan Balkenhol’s sculpture in the Thames, Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 Diagrams for Stephan Balkenhol’s sculpture in the Thames, Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 (1991) by Stephan BalkenholHayward Gallery

Sketches for Stephan Balkenhol's Head of a Man (1992), Figure on a Buoy (1992).

Internal Memorandum about Stephan Balkenhol’s figure in the Thames, Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 (1992) by Hayward GalleryHayward Gallery

The figure was later placed on a large pontoon, after the Port of London Authority was inundated with calls from concerned members of the public who believed the figure to be in mortal danger.

Press Cutting for Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992Hayward Gallery

Press Cutting for Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992Hayward Gallery

Private View Card for Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 Private View Card for Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 (1992)Hayward Gallery

Doubletake private view card.

Exhibition Guide for Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 Exhibition Guide for Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 (1992) by Hayward GalleryHayward Gallery

Doubletake exhibition guide.

Gallery Plans for Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 Gallery Plans for Doubletake: Collective Memory and Current Art, Hayward Gallery, 1992 (1991) by Hayward GalleryHayward Gallery

Doubletake installation plans.

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