John Latour: Thursday's Child

1 May - 7 June 2025
Overview
Through Latour’s intervention, his subjects become spectral, existing in a state of both presence and absence. They emerge and recede, as if caught between memory and erasure, invoking the fragile nature of history and personal remembrance.

Opening Reception: Saturday, May 3, 3-5pm

 

John Latours multidisciplinary practice—spanning text-based art, sculpture, and found photography—examines the ways in which we connect with the past. His work explores how memory, history, and personal narratives are mediated through language, objects, and images. In recent years, Latour has turned his attention to themes of spirit communication and physical mediumship, using them as metaphors for our attempts to reach across time. His practice suggests that the past is not a fixed entity but a shifting, elusive presence—one that we continually interpret, reshape, and even conjure.

 

Thursdays Child presents a new body of photo-based works that engage with the past as a mercurial and unstable concept. Using found photographs—19th-century tintypes and early 20th-century snapshots of individuals, families, and friends—Latour overlays flecks of white paint, disrupting and altering the figures within the images. The exhibitions title references Mondays Child, a 19th-century nursery rhyme that assigns character traits based on the day of ones birth. The verse for Thursdays child—"Thursdays child has far to go"—suggests a journey, a sense of moving forward while remaining tethered to the past. In Latours work, this idea takes on a poignant significance: the figures in his altered photographs, though anonymous, still hold an emotional and historical weight, inviting us to consider their untold stories and unfinished journeys.

 

In addition to these reworked photographs, Latour presents album pages containing a single photographic image, surrounded by vast, empty space. These voids allude to missing family members, forgotten narratives, and the gaps left by times passage. The absence within these compositions heightens our awareness of what is unseen and unknown. Through these subtle yet profound interventions, Latour does not seek to provide answers but instead highlights the instability of memory and the inherent subjectivity of historical narratives. Thursdays Child invites us to engage with these echoes of the past, not as fixed relics but as shifting presences—simultaneously here and elsewhere, seen and unseen, remembered and forgotten.

 

Thursdays Child will be presented in the project space at United Contemporary, an intimate room at the rear of the gallery. This setting enhances the immersive quality of the installation, drawing viewers into quiet contemplation as they reflect on memory, absence, and the traces left behind by those who came before us.