Skip to main content

Don't Look at the Finger

Hetain Patel

Event overview

Don’t Look at the Finger is exhibiting as part of Trinity, the largest solo exhibition to date by the highly acclaimed artist Hetain Patel. 

One of kung fu master Bruce Lee’s most celebrated sayings, voiced in a key scene in his magnum opus Enter the Dragon, warns us never to be distracted by a finger that is pointing at something lest we miss what it is pointing at. This maxim seems especially relevant to the art of Hetain Patel, which frequently beckons us in one direction, only to reveal, after a series of feints and swerves, that its real substance lies elsewhere. In this work, two protagonists and a small coterie of companions, all dressed in vibrantly patterned West African robes, gather in a church for a wedding ceremony. Perhaps, judging by the nervous glances traded by the couple, for an arranged marriage. The proceedings are conducted in sign language – each gesture, extravagant or small, possessing an intimacy and tactility that seems to both presage and magnify the union that is about to take place.

Any gesture, extravagant or small, can be open to misinterpretation, however – and it is this potential for confusion that lurks behind apparently familiar signifiers that Patel brings to the fore. As if mimicking a magician’s sleight of hand in conjuring a bird from within deceptive folds of silk, Patel uses the shape-shifting swirl of his characters’ robes to kick the performance to a different level – the wedding garb miraculously metamorphosing into full-blown kung fu costume; the marital tableau now suddenly striking a martial pose. All is fair in love and war, as the saying goes; and it may be that the couple’s hand-to-hand combat infers both the ever-shifting power struggles of an archetypal battle of the sexes as well as the passionate exchanges of the conjugal bed. This may indeed be where Patel is pointing, but, then again, possibly not. Under the cover of the near-universal ritual of a couple joining together in marriage, we are also witnessing the sight of symbols and icons from the so-called margins joining together, freely and uninhibitedly, in the cultural mainstream – and how this, too, is a cause for celebration. 

Don't Look at the Finger premiered in simultaneous solo exhibitions at QUAD, Derby and Manchester Art Gallery, where it was installed alongside Patel's 2015 film The Jump. Hetain Patel won the 2019 Jarman Award. In 2020, Don't Look at the Finger won the Short Film International Category at Kino der Kunst in Munich.

Don't Look at the Finger was commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella with Manchester Art Gallery and QUAD. Supported by Arts Council England. Initial research supported by Jerwood Choreographic Research Project.

Event details

Details

3 August 2021 – 30 October 2021

John Hansard Gallery

Book Free Tickets

John Hansard Gallery seeks to be fully accessible. Please contact John Hansard Gallery directly if you have any queries or comments on 023 8059 2158 or email: info@jhg.art

There are Blue Badge parking spaces directly at the rear of the building 50 yards from the main entrance. The building is entirely wheelchair accessible, with lifts to all floors.

John Hansard Gallery welcomes Guide and Assistance Dogs.

Large print texts are available upon request from Gallery Reception or by contacting John Handsard Gallery by email or telephone.

Lockers, buggy park and baby changing facilities are available on the ground floor.

Accessible Toilets are on ground and first floors and all toilets are gender neutral.

We use cookies to give you the best experience when using our site. Continue your visit by dismissing this message or find out more here.