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Jeremy Deller: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq

Images

Jeremy Deller, New Commissions: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, 2008. Installation view, New Museum, New York

Photo: Benoit Pailley

Jeremy Deller, New Commissions: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, 2008. Installation view, New Museum, New York

Photo: Benoit Pailley © MCA Chicago

Jeremy Deller, New Commissions: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, 2008. Installation view, New Museum, New York

Photo: Benoit Pailley © MCA Chicago

Jeremy Deller, New Commissions: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, 2008. Installation view, New Museum, New York

Photo: Benoit Pailley © MCA Chicago

Jeremy Deller, New Commissions: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, 2008. Installation view, New Museum, New York

Photo: Benoit Pailley © MCA Chicago

Excerpt from Jeremy Deller's journal

Courtesy of the artist
On a vast white wall, a map of the United States is outlined in black while a map of Iraq is outlined in black on a large white wall to its left.

Jeremy Deller, New Commissions: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, 2008. Installation view, New Museum, New York

Photo: Benoit Pailley © MCA Chicago

Installation view, Jeremy Deller: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, MCA Chicago, Nov 7, 2009

Photo: Staff Sgt. April Hawes, Illinois National Guard Public Affairs Office

About

Jeremy Deller: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, is a new commission by British artist Jeremy Deller as part of the Three M Project. In an effort to encourage the public to discuss the present circumstances in Iraq, a revolving cast of participants including veterans, journalists, scholars, and Iraqi nationals who have expertise in a particular aspect of the region and/or first-hand experience of Iraq have been invited to take up residence in the museum gallery space with the express purpose of encouraging discussion with visitors.

Objects meant to stimulate discussion share the gallery with the resident guest experts. The first and most significant artifact on display is the remnant of a car that was destroyed by an explosion on Al-Mutanabbi, a street in Baghdad, in 2007. This tragedy killed over 30 people, and has taken on added significance because the street, named after a well-known Iraqi poet, was the site of numerous book markets and cafés, and was considered the nexus of Baghdadi cultural and intellectual life. Evidence of the violence continuing to take place in Iraq, the car is meant to ground conversation in the facts, figures, and eyewitness descriptions that have been so lacking in most of the information about the Iraq War made available to the public. The second is a handmade banner by artist Ed Hall, who has collaborated with Deller in the past and is known for his work for trade unions and other interest groups. The last is a wall graphic juxtaposing two maps—one of Iraq and one of the United States. This visual representation serves as a reminder of the disconnect between two countries that are intimately involved politically and economically, though geographically distanced.

However urgently the project encourages discussion about a painful, ongoing situation, this endeavor is nonpartisan, and is unscripted and free form, and as formal or informal as each guest expert desires.

This exhibition is organized by the New Museum. The MCA presentation is organized by Tricia Van Eck, Curatorial Coordinator and Curator of Artist Books. Jeremy Deller: It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq is part of the Three M Project, a series organized by the New Museum, New York; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; and the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, to commission, organize and copresent new works of art.

Open Discussion

  • Conversations occur in the MCA gallery during the following times:
  • Tuesday–Sunday from 10:30 am–1:30 pm and 1:30–4:30 pm
  • Tuesdays from 4:30–7:30 pm

Funding

The Three M Project is sponsored by

Support for the Chicago presentation is generously provided by Susan and Lew Manilow.

Official Airline of the Museum of Contemporary Art