Anna McNay

Interview with Marie Yates

12/07/16

Interview: Marie Yates

Some Dimensions of my Lunch: Conceptual
Art in Britain (1956-1979). Part 2: Marie Yates
 

Richard Saltoun Gallery

24 June – 22 July 2016

Marie Yates (b1940) graduated from Manchester Regional College of Art in
1959. After a period spent producing abstract paintings in St Ives, she
returned to study fine art at Hornsey College of Art (1968-71). During this
time, she was strongly influenced by the writings of Lucy Lippard and Yoko Ono
and the beginnings of conceptual art. She began to produce her Field Workings –
photographic and text works, documenting journeys or “procedures” in the
countryside – and, in 1979, she made Image/woman/text (after Roland Barthes), exploring
social preconceptions about photographic images of women, the way they are
made, and their meanings.


In June 1977, Fenella Crichton wrote in Studio International: “Marie
Yates is a woman working with landscape. Radical ideas do not fit easily into
this framework, because we are deeply riddled with prejudices about both women
and landscape, and as a result she has been widely misinterpreted.” This
misinterpretation, sadly, seems to persist. Yates’s work is currently being
exhibited at Richard Saltoun as part of the gallery’s conceptual art series,
but the artist remains wary of labels. For her, art is key to social change and
ought to form part of a larger discourse, critically engaging the mind.


Read the interview here