Melanie Manchot’s multi-channel video installation explores the intimate stories, rituals, repetitions and ruptures of lives spent in addiction and recovery.

Details

This exhibition has now finished.

Peckham Platform, SE15

21 May – 26 July 2015

Over two years Manchot worked with twelve people in recovery from drug and alcohol misuse in rehabilitation communities in Liverpool, Oxford and London. Twelve is made from their spoken and written memories, recorded and acted out on camera to create a video installation that is part documentary, part fiction. 

“We spent the first seven months meeting once a month but not making work,” Manchot recalls, “which is really unusual for me. It was research in a very honest sense – searching for what might happen, what might become, what might be.”

Each part of Twelve is based on a scene from an existing feature film that deals with addiction and recovery or with obsessive, traumatic behaviour. The video installation directly references films by Michael Haneke, Gus Van Sant, Bela Tarr and Chantal Akerman.

“We defined the aesthetic framework together, but in terms of content, it’s completely theirs. In a lot of cases I knew what they wanted to do but in some cases I didn’t – they’d just turn up on the day of filming, speak, act, do what they wanted to do.”

Subjects rarely address or face the camera and often scenes are recorded as continuous takes giving time for reflection and recollection. Visually, water and glass, reflections and shadows connect scenes together; journeys, cycles and repetitions are used to show the complex and non-linear nature of recovery. 

Throughout filming the group reviewed their footage together. Stephen Giddings, one of the twelve, says: “You’re taking that step back and watching yourself from a distance. Even though when I was filming I felt pretty good, it was like the camera captured just how vulnerable I really still was at that time.”

Artist and participant quotes from interview with Michaela Nettell for AN Magazine article, published March 2015 www.michaela-nettell.com

Background

Twelve was commissioned by Mark Prest of Portraits of Recovery and developed by Melanie Manchot working with Action on Addiction, the Ley Community and the Psychosocial Research Unit at the University of Central Lancashire. It was financially supported by Small Arts Awards from the Wellcome Trust and Arts Council England through the National Lottery. 

Twelve launched at Peckham Platform in May 2015 before being shown at Castlefield Gallery, Manchester; Galerie m, Bochum, Germany; Aspex Gallery, Portsmouth and Towner, Eastbourne. An edited version of Twelve featured in Group Therapy: Mental Distress in a Digital Age at Fact, Liverpool in March 2015.

More Exhibitions

Exhibitions

Bookbed

31 January – 23 March 2014

Ruth Beale explores the idea of the book and public library as generative public space and symbols of self education.

Digital Tapestry

October - December 2020

This video artwork was developed by young people working with video artist Eva Grace Bor. It is the result of a Peckham Platform programme that invited artist Meera Shakti Osborne and producer A.G. to run workshop sessions with our Youth Platform group.

Pride of Peckham exhibition

The Pride of Peckham with Azarra Amoy

Monday 14 February - Monday 14 March 2022

Peckham Platform is delighted to partner with Maximus and artist Azarra Amoy for The Pride of Peckham Mega Banner which will be on display until March 14 and return throughout the year.

Artists

Meet the socially engaged artists working with our communities in Peckham

All Artists