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London’s stupidest gallery

Everyone loves a private view, and I am no exception. I don’t know how many hours I must have spent trudging around central London’s art galleries in search of warm white wine – my social life doesn’t extend much beyond the confines of that circuit to be honest. Lately, however, I’ve been to some dreadful things; shows that seem to exist purely in order to enable their ritzy opening galas. I suppose I have only myself to blame for turning up to an evening at London’s stupidest gallery last week, but it was truly horrible: a party thrown for a scenester artist who turned DJ for the night, spinning butchered mash-ups of 1980s club hits to a scrum of pouting influencers. As for the art: suffice to say I’m not giving anyone the dignity of a namecheck. (The gallery was Saatchi Yates.)

It was all making me feel a bit cynical. But then, at the tail-end of the week, I saw two exhibitions of such remarkable quality that I remembered why I got into the game in the first place. The first came courtesy of the indefatigably brilliant Suzanne Treister, an artist of such dazzling originality that she puts most contemporaries to shame. And Prophetic Dreams, her career retrospective at Modern Art Oxford, is unquestionably one of the shows of the year.

Treister (b.1958) has spent much of her career being labelled as a conspiracy-obsessed paranoiac: decades ago, she was warning that personal technology offered a gateway to pernicious new forms of surveillance. Nobody listened, but the leaks and revelations that spilled out after 2014 proved her right.

But she’s more than a mere Cassandra, and the show does a fine job of demonstrating the breadth of her uncanny, heavily researched practice. Things kick off with a series of Balthus-inflected surrealist paintings that she made in the early 1980s, marrying Jewish mystical signifiers to weirdo, cod-symbolist arrangements that mimic the aesthetic of Soviet socialist realism: they’re eerie things that seem to prefigure the concerns and mood of her various projects to follow.

Treister fields custom-designed video games, including delicate miniatures painted on to floppy discs; mocked-up CD cases; even a music video, purportedly the work of a time-travelling pop star called Rosalind Brodsky – the song, rather marvellously, is entitled ‘Satellite Of Lvov’. Then she switches tack again, presenting a series of informational flow charts encompassing the totality of modern society, from monetarism to the American government’s weird ventures into the realm of mind-expanding drugs. You could spend a month in here following the connections Treister teases out in her work: I had an hour and loved every second of it.