Luke Burton: Filigree Endings
Bosse & Baum, London
28 February-26 March 2015
Review by Helena Haimes
This is a scene from ‘Balfron Flower’ (2014), one of British artist Luke Burton’s recent video pieces, currently installed at Bosse and Baum’s recently acquired space in an industrial unit in Peckham. Burton is on a mission to interrogate the language of the decorative, and he does so playfully, using inimitably British cultural references – flaneuring through a suburban park at night with a torch shining on his brogues; strobe lighting a display of public pansies and setting the resulting video to an electronic soundtrack; or stroking and caressing the kind of green, velvet piping that smacks of a particularly conservative type of sofa and instantly brings to mind strong tea and marmite on toast.
There are three screens here – one mounted on the corner of the space and two suspended from the gallery ceiling – showing a selection of his video works; as well as a set of seven ‘hanging basket’ sculptures which you’d be distinctly unlikely to see suspended by your average, suburban front door; and a simple line drawing in felt tip with ‘safety net’ written beside it which apparently is there to tell us something about his process. I’m not convinced that this last element isn’t in danger of confusing the other two – its apparent function seems unclear, and its inclusion here feels less thought-through than the other pieces.