Back to All Events

Ilana Harris-Babou: Tasteful Interiors


  • Institute of Contemporary Art 752 Vine Street Chattanooga, TN, 37403 United States (map)
TastefulInteriors_website.png
Ilana Harris-Babou (American, b. 1991), digital still from Finishing a Raw Basement, 2017, 4K video, 6:41 min. Courtesy and copyright the artist.

Ilana Harris-Babou (American, b. 1991), digital still from Finishing a Raw Basement, 2017, 4K video, 6:41 min. Courtesy and copyright the artist.

Tasteful Interiors

Ilana Harris-Babou
Aug 16-Nov 5, 2021
Artist Talk: Oct 21

Exhibition Essay:
Smoke, Mirrors, and Splinters by Dessane Lopez Cassell Co-commissioned with Kunsthaus Hamburg, October 2021

The ICA presents a survey of Ilana Harris-Babou’s (American, b. 1991) early career video- and installation-based sculptural practice from 2016-2020.

On view in Tasteful Interiors are four seminal video works— Cooking with the Erotic (2016); Finishing a Raw Basement (2017); Reparation Hardware (2018); and Decision Fatigue (2020)—accompanied by a selection of recent collages and installed alongside “fantastically distorted, dysfunctional” ceramics and improvisational sculptures such as tools and utensils that are rendered entirely useless and absurd. Three of these select video works also highlight the artist’s close collaboration with her mother Sheila Harris over the past several years, who plays both central and co-hosting roles.


What is taste, and what then, is tasteful? Is taste a set of values either learned, experienced, or sought? Is taste a basic human sense that can be pleasurable, satisfying, tactile, even absent or abject? What does your taste say about your past experiences, present identity, and aspirational futures?

Witty specialized language and jargon is deployed in each video work through various leading characters—from the DIY home improvement or cooking show host, to the online wellness guru or self-care social media influencer, or the high-end design shop designer. Babou’s digital ‘realities’ spill out into real space creating installations masking as quasi-retail spaces via the presentation of oddly crafted sculptures, tools, utensils, and lamps that serve as props in her video works.

Harris-Babou’s practice asks urgent questions—in tongue-and-cheek delivery—about relationships, violence, and consumption. Her work thinks about possible answers to questions of taste and of interiors, both physical and psychological: how can histories, complexities, and even individualities be washed away vis-à-vis the glossy facades of contemporary design and wellness brands in our seductive economic system of American capitalism? In many of her works, she looks to these aspirational spaces of retail and consumption as contemporary anthropological sites—they serve as barometers and as tastemakers of human desires and ideals—in order to investigate the erasure, omission or disregard of specific histories within them. Her work supports the argument that the objects that we surround ourselves with are extensions of who we are or desire to be; they represent our past and also manifest our future.

The glut of digital media offerings available 24/7 and the ways we insatiably consume them offer the point of departure for Harris-Babou’s videos. Via these numerous digital interfaces, our “realities” of daily living become reinforced through personally-constructed algorithms; our contemporary arbiters of taste are click bait feedback loops. Harris-Babou is acutely aware of this abject irony of engagement and uses it as fuel. She says, “I like to use humor and familiar [digital] forms as a Trojan horse to get heavier material into people’s line of sight.”

Where we situate ourselves in today’s contemporary digital milieu—from the things we watch, click, and buy—is a question Harris-Babou asks, and even implicates, within herself: “all the things I think about in my work are things that I’m seduced by.” Harris-Babou’s Tasteful Interiors are gooey and hand-formed; they are witty and intelligently marketed; they are personal and personable; they are suspiciously on-trend and critically self-aware; they are simultaneously amateur and ace.

 Harris-Babou is also the subject of a solo exhibition Wholesome Fun at Kunsthaus Hamburg from October 2-November 28, 2021. The ICA at UTC and Kunsthaus Hamburg co-commissioned Dessane Lopez Cassell—a curator, arts writer, and editor based in New York—to write about Harris-Babou’s practice Tasteful Interiors in the form of a digital exhibition essay titled Smoke, Mirrors, and Splinters available online here.

Tasteful Interiors has additionally been made with the support of Triangle Arts Association, where Harris-Babou is artist-in-residence from March 1-August 27, 2021.

Ilana Harris-Babou holds an MFA in New Genres from Columbia University (2016) and a BA in Art from Yale University (2013). She has exhibited her work throughout the United States and Europe, and was included in the 2019 Whitney Biennial. Her work is held publicly in the permanent collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. For more information, please visit ilanahb.com.

Ilana Harris-Babou (American, b. 1991), digital still from Cooking with the Erotic, 2016. 2-channel HD video, 11:37min. Courtesy and copyright the artist.

Ilana Harris-Babou (American, b. 1991), digital still from Cooking with the Erotic, 2016. 2-channel HD video, 11:37min. Courtesy and copyright the artist.

Previous
Previous
May 10

Terry Adkins: Mute

Next
Next
November 17

Immortal Messages: The 2021 UTC Art Annual Juried Student Exhibition: Juror Ellex Swavoni