rebeccas bagged place: a plastic wrapped flat by iain baxter&
image courtesy of raven row © marcus j. leith

 

 

rebecca levy lived in the apartment directly above the raven row gallery in london. when she passed away, the contents of her flat were donated to the gallery, leaving behind intimate possessions and furniture pieces, which narrate her adventures and experiences.

 

canadian contemporary artist iain baxter& utilized the abandoned space for his work ‘rebecca’s bagged place’. permitted by the gallery to use the location, which typically remains inaccessible to the public, the artist wrapped each object and surface — from the patterned wallpaper, to faux flower arrangements and refrigerator magnets — in sheets of transparent plastic, preserving the items and their distinct arrangement before levy passed away. the haunting results chronicle the inhabitants life and eternalize her memory through the protective medium. the work is a variation on the theme — baxter& reconfigured his piece from 1966, ‘bagged place’, in which he carefully bagged every element in a four room apartment, including a toilet and a television, in cellophane sheets.

 

 

rebecca's bagged place: a plastic wrapped flat by iain baxter&
image courtesy of raven row © marcus j. leith

 

 

rebecca's bagged place: a plastic wrapped flat by iain baxter&
image courtesy of raven row © marcus j. leith

 

 

rebecca's bagged place: a plastic wrapped flat by iain baxter&
image courtesy little histories

 

 

rebecca's bagged place: a plastic wrapped flat by iain baxter&
image courtesy little histories