Focal Point Gallery is pleased to announce ‘In My Room’, Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings’ first solo institutional exhibition, bringing together lm, fresco painting and works on paper. As a new body of work, ‘In My Room’ develops the artists’ enquiry into the politics, histories and aesthetics of queer spaces and culture. This enquiry builds on their travels across the UK whilst making ‘UK Gay Bar Directory (UKGBD)’ 2016, a vast project documenting the systematic closure of LGBTQA+ dedicated social spaces. To Quinlan and Hastings, it became apparent through this research that the gay scene caters predominantly to white gay men. This prompted them to consider how this scene strengthens the historic male access to capital and power within the urban landscape.
Wishing to explore the question of access further in their new lm, Quinlan and Hastings went location scouting in Birmingham’s gay village, only to nd that in fact many of the bars and clubs have recently closed or will close in the next few months, due to the area being rapidly redeveloped as luxury residential accommodation in anticipation of the new high-speed rail line. This gave the film – and Quinlan and Hastings’ ongoing wider archival project – a new urgency to capture these historical LGBTQA+ spaces at a time of immense change, thereby highlighting the impact of gentri cation upon the cultural substructures of a city and its gay communities.
In conjunction with the archival impulse of the lm, Quinlan and Hastings have used dance and the performing body as a way to think through and investigate the ways in which male interaction and power are consolidated, particularly in relation to male sex culture. The lm is set in three different locations: Bar Jester and the Core club in Birmingham and Shoeburyness Fort in Southend-on-Sea. Recently closed, Bar Jester had been open since the 1970s, transitioning from a men-only venue
in the 1980s to a women-upstairs men-downstairs layout, and then into a mixed venue. The Core club is a members-only, men-only venue which hosts monthly club nights: it will close in the coming months. The third location, Shoeburyness Fort, was used by the British School of Gunnery as a train- ing and experimental base for the army since 1859, then re-armed during World War 2 as part of the coastal defence, but now in disuse. Another form of a male-only environment at that time, the imposing, yet desolate Fort is anked by the Thames Estuary one side, and by a recently built housing development on the other.
Within these three locations, the camera focuses on the strict routine of the line dancing format which is performed by the dancers without any emotional connection to the music or communication with each other. In contrast, a specially choreographed shadow dance (a derivative of the line dance)
allows for a much more charged mirroring of the dancers’ bodies, whose interaction becomes intensely intimate and at times, almost violent. The lm suggests a subconscious reproduction of power in public space through codes, gestures and behaviour. Wall rubbings of the stone relief that fronted the Bar Jester appear as a repeating motif throughout the lm. These unique works are also presented on paper in the exhibition. A ghostly record of an iconic LGBTQA+ venue at the moment of its passing, the Jester takes on a life of its own as a folkloric and governing character.
Quinlan and Hastings will also create a major new fresco painting in the gallery, bringing this special- ist, ancient technique into contemporary practice by engaging with the public and architectural nature of the medium. Depicting a high street populated by pedestrians, this quotidian imagery considers the role urban architecture plays in the formation of identities, and re ects on the ways in which movement is informed by a culture of male dominance. At a time of extreme and ongoing austerity, heightened surveillance and the privatisation of public spaces, the street is an increasingly contested and political zone.
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