
23 August -
12 October 2025
Gertrude Contemporary
21-31 High Street, Preston SouthOpening: Friday 22 August, 6–8pm
Bureaucracy of Feelings approaches the last decade of Gertrude through an anthology of Registered Charity: a small artist run space that neighboured the former for 17 years, until both galleries relocated to new premises. In an era of structured dissent, the curator of Bureaucracy of Feelings directed Registered Charity from 2018-2023, at which he met a number of artists who were responding to the administrative language—statements, policies, metrics, appointments, protocols—that dominated the last decade, in their artistic practices. In a series of new commissions, Lucreccia Quintanilla quotes corporate aphorisms; Moorina Bonini considers the impermanence of bodies that transit institutional spaces; Jemi Gale doodles like a frenzied clerk; and Michael Kennedy reduces an oeuvre of artworks to the indexification of files. Indeed, Bureaucracy of Feelings builds upon the premise of an anthology within a retrospective, to chart artists who were actively building, shaping and resisting frameworks that directly or indirectly supported Gertrude’s activities over the last decade. By operating as arts administrators, board members, on advisory panels, and volunteers in the broader art sector in tandem with their artistic practices.
What is the shape of the non-profit structure on display? Did professional managerialism become a standard response to social issues over the past ten years? Has this style, position or strategy achieved its aims or simply increased the volume of rules, procedures, HR speak, administrative forms and social media activity that engulfs our everyday lives? These queries become a site of poetic and artistic production, scraping lyrical residue from this corporate excess to reconfigure its homogeneity. Steven Rhall discloses his income statement; Daisy Collier ponders on the status of bricks and mortar on Unceded Land; Sarah Brasier paints about typing; Thea Jones stages a circle of pathos; Katie Paine repurposes office furniture with discretion; former members of Watch This Space stage a board meeting as a puppet show; Sophie Penkethman-Young meditates on the indeterminant progress of loading bars and spinning wheels; and John Elcatsha replicates their eye-strained prescription on glass.