LAF EDITIONS | MATT SMITH

21 - 31 January 2021
All prices include VAT.
Please contact the Gallery for framed pricing.

For all sales enquiries please contact Cynthia Corbett, Gallery Founder & Director
at info@thecynthiacorbettgallery.com

UK-born Matt Smith is well known for his site-specific work in museums, galleries and historic houses. Using clay, textiles and their associated references, he explores how cultural organisations operate using techniques of institutional critique and artist intervention. He is interested in how history is a constantly selected and refined narrative that presents itself as a fixed and accurate account of the past and how, through taking objects and repurposing them in new situations, this can be brought to light. Of particular interest to him is how museums can be reframed into alternative perspectives.


The limited edition prints were developed for the exhibition 'Losing Venus' at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford. Each print is based on a photograph from the museum’s collection. Each photograph was taken in a country where the British imposed or maintained homophobic legislation. Drawing on the gridded patterns used in Victorian photography to ‘scientifically record’ racial difference, the photographs illustrate the erasure of identities and ways of being around the world under colonial rule. Each print is labelled with the country where the source photograph was taken and also with the homophobic legislation statute implemented, or maintained, by the British. (Original photographs came from the archives of the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford)

In June 2020 our long-standing partner Contemporary Art Society has acquired twelve ceramic and tapestry works by artist Matt Smith. This acquisition will become a central focus for the displays at the Hove Museum when it reopens. This exciting project was possible due to the Contemporary Art Society’s Rapid Response Fund in partnership with Frieze London, which is a new initiative supporting artists and museums during the Covid-19 pandemic. The CAS Rapid Response Fund is being used to purchase works by artists to add to collections of museums across the UK – ensuring financial support goes where it is needed most. We are thrilled that Hove Museum will now feature a major installation of Matt Smith's artworks, which is highly illustrative of his style and artistic research. Much of Matt Smith’s work explores and comments on marginalised history and it will form a key inspiration for activity sessions as the museum expands its work with groups with varied critical social needs.

"What museums collect, and what this tells us about what society deems important, is an ongoing fascination to me. Recent events have shown how important objects, and particularly sculpture, are in the national debate about who we are and how we got here. I have worked with the museums in Brighton and Hove many times over the last decade and am delighted that this acquisition leads on from that relationship. I look forward to seeing how the works are interpreted and curated to help the widest possible audience feel welcomed and visible within the museums," – Smith says.

For Collect 2020, Cynthia Corbett and Matt Smith co-curated a site-specific installation featuring textiles and black parian works. The curation was extremely well-received, and Matt was awarded the inaugural Brookfield Properties Crafts Council Collection Prize, which allowed the Crafts Council to purchase six artworks for the Council's collection. The V&A Museum's Design and Textiles department also acquired one of Matt's subversive embroideries.

Matt Smith on the Creative process & practice for his Tapestries:

“There is no one way of interpreting these pieces, but the issues that really interest me circle around the issues of professional painting and amateur sewing, fine art and craft and gender. How one image goes from being a painting by a professional (named, male) artist and moves into a hobby craft kit which is usually done by an amateur (female) maker at the home and is then unpicked by me ( a professional male artist) and moves back into the fine art world. Layered onto this are the people (usually unnamed) depicted in the images.

Ideally, I would love the viewer to get visual pleasure from the works and also spend the time thinking about the transition of both the object over time and our understanding of power relationships and particularly how gender roles have changed and who has been allowed to speak/be heard/view and be seen.

Finally, for me, the removal of faces and replacing them with 'backgrounds' stops the eye being able to rest and find a resolution to the images. So I would hope that there would be an ongoing desire to revisit the image to try and find a resolution that will never really come about.”

In 2015 / 2016, Matt was Artist in Residence at the Victoria and Albert Museum. In 2009 he received the ARC Award for Craft from Aspex Gallery and was awarded the inaugural Young Masters Maylis Grand Ceramics Prize in 2014. At Collect 2018, he was awarded "Object of the Show" by Ekow Eshun. Matt regularly exhibits his work at public collections including Coming Out, Walker Art Gallery 2017, A Place at the Table, Pallant House, 2014; Subversive Design, Brighton Museum and Art Gallery, 2013; DIY A Revolution in Handicrafts, Society for Contemporary Craft, Pittsburg, 2010.

Matt Smith started his career at the V&A before developing exhibitions at the Science Museum and the British Film Institute. After retraining as a ceramicist, his work has often taken the form of hybrid artist/curator. His large scale solo shows have addressed themes including the legacy of colonisation in Losing Venus (Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford) and Flux: Parian Unpacked (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge), LGBT visibility in Queering the Museum (Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, 2010) and Other Stories (Leeds University Art Collection, 2012). Matt co-directed and curated Unravelling the National Trust which saw over thirty artists working with contemporary craft (including himself) commissioned to respond to the histories of the National Trust properties Nymans House, Uppark House and The Vyne. Matt holds a practice-based PhD from the University of Brighton. The PhD explored the use of craft techniques in contemporary art by artists exploring identities. He is Professor of Ceramics and Glass at Konstfack University of the Arts, Stockholm and Honorary Fellow at the University of Leicester’s School of Museum Studies. His work is held in the collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Walker Art Gallery, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery and the Fitzwilliam Museum as well as numerous private international collections.

Matt Smith is internationally represented by Cynthia Corbett Gallery.