









Clémence de La Tour du Pin, Untitled (parchment), 2022, Oil, pigment and wax on cardboard, umbrella's rib, bow, transfer print, 23 × 29 × 40 cm.

Michelle Rawlings, Untitled, 2023, Oil on linen, 22 × 33 cm

Nicola Gunnarsson, Untitled, 2023, Oil and gemstones on denim, 80 × 100 cm

Valerie Kong, Thank You, 2023, Wrapping paper, shoe box, lacquer, tape, 48 × 33 × 23 cm

Poppy Jones, Blue Silk, 2023, Oil and watercolour on silk cotton, soldered aluminium frame, 21 × 29 × 2.5 cm

Carina Kehlet Schou, Untitled, 2021, Digital C-type print, framed, 45 × 47 × 4 cm

Antonia Brown, O.H. (1880), 2023, Silk organza, linen, cane, oil pastel, pigment, ribbon, steel mesh, 90 × 30 × 13 cm

Emma Schwartz , Some Body, 2021, Oil on canvas, 60 × 45 cm

Amy Stober, New Jersey 3, 2022, Cast Polyurethane, polyurethane , pigments, acrylic, 40 × 60 × 27 cm

Carina Kehlet Schou, Untitled, 2021, Digital C-type print, framed, 47 × 36 × 4 cm

The Artificial Silk Girl (installation view). Documentation by Jack Elliot Edwards.
The Artificial Silk Girl
Antonia Brown, Clémence de La Tour du Pin, Nicola Gunnarsson, Poppy Jones, Carina Kehlet Schou, Valerie Kong, Michelle Rawlings, Emma Schwartz, Amy Stober
1 June – 22 July 2023
‘Dear Madam:
Once I stole your fur coat. Naturally, you will be mad
at me. Did you love it a lot? I’ll have you know, I love
it a lot. There were times where it lifted me up and
made me a high-society woman and a stage and the
beginning of a star. And then there were times when I
loved it just because it’s soft and feels like a human
being all over my skin. And it’s gentle and kind. But I
also had problems because of it, you better believe it.
And I almost went as far as turning tricks, which is
something a decent girl who wants to maintain her
reputation shouldn’t do. I want to return the fur coat
to you. It’s in perfect condition. I’ve always taken it
off beforehand. My friend Tilli also treated it with
great care. I want to believe now that you should not
steal because of order and what have you. If I knew your
face and I liked it, I wouldn’t have done this to you or
at least I would have felt sorry for it. It’s only
because of order and my papers and because of the
sacrifice I have to make, and because I want to be taken
and out of love. Perhaps you have other fur coats, even
an ermine one. It’s always the wrong ones who get
everything. Please be good to my fur coat – please make
sure it doesn’t suffer when you sulphur it. And I can
tell you that a thousand fur coats could rain down on
me, because anything is possible for me, but I would
never love another coat the same way I loved this one.
Sincerely yours, Doris’ – Excerpt from ‘The Artificial
Silk Girl’, Irmgard Keun, 1932
Taken from the 1932 novel of the same name, The
Artificial Silk Girl considers our relationship to
material objects. As companions to our everyday lives,
material objects have the ability to preserve traces of
history through their seams and fibres – offering a
unique imprint of their owner. Many of the works in this
exhibition reflect on the role clothing plays in the
formation of our identities and memories: some
reimagining materials through the context of childhood
or nostalgia, others through advertising or fantasy.
Materials are susceptible to the touch and physicality of the wearer, moulding to our bodies and needs: denim loosens through activity and movement, velvet notices every fingerprint, silk clings the outline of each limb. While we mark our clothes through use and wear, they mark us in response – a tight fit can leave indentations against our skin, or tint us with its dye.
The poetic tendency for materials to retain our posture, shape and habits allows us to project sentimental value onto these objects. The image of clothing without people is often associated with absence, or nostalgia. Hanging limply on a coat stand, they serve as relics of their past owners, to be preserved and cherished – their scent, stains and loose threads all revealing a personal history of a life once lived.
At once vignettes into the past, material objects can simultaneously transport us into the future: holding the promise of transformation. In a culture of newness, we are constantly encouraged to acquire more, with the mindset that objects will fulfil and expand who we are. We get closer to that fantasy with every new purchase, and every addition to our growing assortment of material possessions.
Antonia Phoebe Brown
(b. Pietermaritzburg, South Africa)
lives and works in Brussels. Selected exhibitions
include: The Postcard Party, CC Strombeek, Brussels
(2023), Le Voeu du Faisan, M.Simons, Amsterdam (2023),
Les Anneaux de Saturne, Galerie Derouillon, Paris
(2022), Rama da sasa say so and, Fitzpatrick Gallery,
Paris (2022), Superposition, Hinterconti, Hamburg
(2022), Roaring Shelters, 10n, Brussels (2022)
Clémence de La Tour du Pin
(b. 1986, Roanne, France)
lives and works in Paris and New York City. Selected
exhibitions include: Man’s Traces in Nature, Wschód,
Warsaw (2022), Host, CAPC – Musée d’art contemporain de
Bordeaux, Bordeaux (2021), In shade, Smart Objects, Los
Angeles (2021), Windings, Femtensesse, Oslo (2021)
Nicola Gunnarsson
(b. 1995, London, UK) lives and works
in London. Selected exhibitions include: Teller.org.uk,
London (2022), Material Girl, Loveday Gallery, London
(2022), Dinner Party Gallery, London (2021)
Poppy Jones
(b.1985, London, UK) lives and works in
Bexhill-on-Sea. Selected exhibitions include: A Gauzy
Flame, Herald St, London (2023), Poppy Jones, The Artist
Room, London (2023), Body & Soul, Overduin & Co, Los
Angeles (2023), Interiors, Mai 36, Zurich (2022),
Cutting Shade, Mrs. Gallery, Los Angeles (2022), Bright
Sleep, South Parade x Painters Painting Paintings,
London (2021)
Carina Kehlet Schou
(b.1995, Copenhagen, Denmark) lives
and works in London. Nominated for: Palm Photo Prize
(2022). Featured in: The Wire (2023), AnOther Magazine
(2022), Hero Magazine (2022), Creative Review (2021).
Previous exhibitions: Saatchi and Saatchi Unsigned,
London (2023)
Valerie Kong
(b. 1994, Hong Kong) lives and works in
London. Selected exhibitions include: Hard Copy,
Montague, London (2022), Octopus, Ginny on Frederick,
London (2020), No Measurements Required, Nicoletti
Contemporary, London (2019), Fashion Café, Kantine,
Brussels (2019)
Michelle Rawlings
(b. 1980, Dallas, USA) lives and works
in Santa Fe. Selected exhibitions include: La fille aux
cheveux de lin, Chapter, New York (2022), Michelle
Rawlings, ANDNOW, Dallas, 2021, In the Garden, Night
Gallery, Los Angeles (2020), Here's why Patterns, Here's
why patterns, Here's why patterns, Misako & Rosen, Tokyo
(2019)
Emma Schwartz
(b. 1992, Toronto, Canada) lives and works
in New York City. Selected exhibitions include: who’s
who, In Lieu, Los Angeles (2023), True Alchemy, Thierry
Goldberg, New York (2023), only joking, Annarumma
Gallery, Naples (2022), Fiction or Fictions, Christian
Andersen, Copenhagen (2022), see you in the funny
papers, Chapter, New York City (2021)
Amy Stober
(b. 1994, Oakland, USA) lives and works in
Baltimore. Selected exhibitions include: Self Storage,
A.D Gallery, New York City (2022), Elective Affinities,
Chapter, New York (2022), May My Fiction Rule, Chris
Andrews, Montreal (2022), Electric Affinities, T293
Gallery, Rome (2022), Holding Patterns, Springsteen
Gallery, Baltimore (2021)