Home #Hwoodtimes Mike Kelley: Ghost and Spirit – A Major Retrospective at Tate Modern

Mike Kelley: Ghost and Spirit – A Major Retrospective at Tate Modern

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Tate Modern Remembers the Imagination of Mike Kelley

By Tequila Mockingbird

Los Angeles, CA (The Hollywood Times) 12/24/24 – The Tate Modern in London is currently hosting a major retrospective of the iconic American artist Mike Kelley, titled Mike Kelley: Ghost and Spirit. The exhibition, which opened on October 3, 2024, runs until March 9, 2025, offering a comprehensive look at Kelley’s groundbreaking career, spanning from the late 1970s through to his untimely death in 2012.

(Photo: THT)

Known for his provocative exploration of childhood, popular culture, and social commentary, Kelley’s work challenges conventional ideas of innocence, nostalgia, and societal norms. The exhibition presents a dynamic range of works, including paintings, sculptures, installations, videos, and performances, offering a deep dive into the artist’s complex, often unsettling world.

Some key highlights of the show include:

  • Echoes (1991): This large-scale installation features stuffed animals and found objects, creating a haunting commentary on the blurred boundaries between childhood and adulthood.
  • Kandinsky’s Other World (1993): A series of paintings that fuse the influence of Wassily Kandinsky’s abstract forms with elements of pop culture and children’s drawings, revealing Kelley’s unique synthesis of high and low art.
  • Mobile Home (1997): A life-size replica of a mobile home, transformed into a surreal and unsettling space, questioning the idea of domesticity and the American dream.
  • Catholic School (1999): A striking installation that recreates the interior of a Catholic school classroom, complete with desks, chairs, and religious iconography, evoking themes of discipline, conformity, and spiritual struggle.

Curated by Catherine Grenier and Daniel Birnbaum, Mike Kelley: Ghost and Spirit mark the first major UK retrospective of the artist’s work. The exhibition offers a rare opportunity to explore the breadth of Kelley’s influence, from his early days as a student to his legacy as a visionary force in contemporary art.