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Life as she is lived - Stephen Willats at the Whitechapel

— March 2014

Associated media

Gallery installation shot of Stephen Willat's work

Stephen Willats: Concerning Our Present Way of Living


4 March–14 September 2014


Whitechapel Gallery, London

English conceptual artist Stephen Willats (b.1943) was one of the first artists to take work out of galleries and into the world outside, pioneering socially interactive and community engaged art in the 1960s and ’70s. This archive display focuses on his exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery in 1979 that directly related the Gallery to local communities in east London, from the leather industry workers around Brick Lane, to dock workers and residents of the nearby Ocean housing estate.

The exhibition is the first to revisit Willats’ 1970s socially engaged projects that he made in east London and includes photographs and recordings from the artist’s own archive and documents from the Whitechapel Gallery, alongside works from Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, The Museum of London and Tate. 

Since the 1960s Stephen Willats’ work has raised important questions around the function and meaning of art in society. In 1978, Willats spent over a year working with residents of the Ocean housing estate in the borough of Tower Hamlets, at the time one of the largest social housing estates in Europe, and talked to people about their living conditions. One of the resulting works,Sorting Out Other People’s Lives (1978), explored the intersection between community and home life through recordings and photographs of a woman who lived on the estate. An active member of the community, she is depicted within two contexts: her family life with her husband looking after six children, and the organizations she was involved in, from the Tenants Association to the Citizens Advice Bureau. 

The display also includes Inside an Ocean (1979), the project which was installed in the Ocean estate and was part of the Whitechapel Gallery exhibition. The work involved many residents from the estate in its development and in its presentation and reception. Featuring photographs, questionnaires and ‘response sheets’, the work was not complete until visitors had seen both displays, extending the exhibition beyond the Gallery and into the local community. 

Other highlights from the display includeThe Place of Work (1979), resulting from conversations with people employed in  factory workshops producing leather garments around Brick Lane and Working within a Defined Context (1978), developed from photographic documentation made in the West India Dock just at the moment that it was winding down for its re-development and included tape recordings of dockers discussing their working processes.  



Stephen Willats was born in London in 1943. His practice includes a diverse range of disciplines from cybernetics and communications theory to computer technology. He studied at Ealing School of Art (1962–3), began editing and publishing Control Magazine in 1965 and in 1972–3 was Director of the Centre for Behavioural Art in London. Solo exhibitions include: 4 Inseln, in Berlin, National Gallery, Berlin, (1980), MetaFilter and Related Works, Tate Gallery, London (1982), Changing Everything, South London Gallery (1998), How the World is and How it could be, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Siegen (2006),  From my Mind to Your Mind, Milton Keynes Gallery (2007), Assumptions and Presumptions, Art on the Underground, London (2007), In Two Minds, Galerie Erna Hecey, Brussels (2010), COUNTERCONSCIOUSNESS, Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe, Germany (2010). Control. Stephen Willats. Work 1962–69, is currently on display at Raven Row, London, until 30 March 2014 and Representing the Possible is at Victoria Miro, London, from 13 March to 17 April 2014.

Stephen Willats: Concerning Our Present Way of Living is curated by Nayia Yiakoumaki, Curator Archive Gallery, Whitechapel Gallery.

Stephen Willats: Concerning Our Present Way of Livingis accompanied by a catalogue featuring an interview with the artist.

The Whitechapel Gallery archive exhibitions are generously supported by Catherine and Franck Petitgas with additional support from the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art.

Visitor information


This exhibition is in the Whitechapel's  Pat Matthews Gallery (Gallery 4).
Opening times: Tuesday – Sunday, 11a.m. – 6p.m., Thursdays, 11a.m. – 9p.m.  Admission free.

Whitechapel Gallery
77–82 Whitechapel High Street
London E1 7QX.

Nearest London Underground Station: Aldgate East, Liverpool Street, Tower Gateway DLR. Telephone: + 44 (0) 20 7522 7888


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