Dean Kelland

Imposter Syndrome

This catalogue accompanies the exhibition Dean Kelland: Imposter Syndrome’ 20 Sep – 22 Dec 2023, at Ikon Gallery in Birmingham, UK.

Ikon’s exhibition features a number of Dean Kelland’s new films, prints and sketchbooks that reimagine the psychoanalytic dialogue that has occurred between Pop Art and Prison Art since the 1960s.

Referencing figures from popular culture such as Elvis and David Bowie, Kelland interrogates male identity and flawed notions of masculinity.

It is the culmination of Kelland’s four-year artist’s residency at HMP Grendon (2019-2023), funded by the Marie-Louise von Motesiczky Charitable Trust.

Birmingham-born artist Dean Kelland has been making art for nearly three decades. Despite this, his chosen exhibition title, ‘Dean Kelland: Imposter Syndrome’, reflects his experience at HMP Grendon, an all-male, Category B therapeutic prison.

By setting up a studio in the carceral setting, with its own history and typology of art, Kelland has found himself assuming multiple identities.

HMP Grendon opened in the post-war period, as an experimental psychiatric prison and, by taking on the residency, Kelland understood that the compulsive behaviour underlying his filmed performances – in which he repeats a physical action in a prolonged and painful way – would be examined by the prison’s therapeutic community.

Ikon have also published the following book on occasion of Kelland’s residency ‘Dean Kelland – Notes from Grendon: Two

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