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Henry Moore Studios & Gardens is currently closed for winter, reopening on 1 April 2026.

David Johnson, 'Inhibition: Beyond the doubt of a shadow' 2025 (audio description)

A small rectangular table with four round stools on a piece of carpet in the middle of a gallery space.

David Johnson, 'Inhibition: Beyond the doubt of a shadow' 2025 (audio description) Audio description

Stop 9, track 2

Audio description of David Johnson’s Inhibition: Beyond the doubt of a shadow 2025.

Audio description for David Johnson, 'Inhibition: Beyond the doubt of a shadow' 2025 (audio description) read by Stop 9, track 2

Transcript

Stop 9. Track 2.
David Johnson, Inhibition: Beyond the doubt of a shadow 2025

A table and four stools, like you might encounter in a café. The table and stools have black linoleum tops, and polished bent plywood legs. It’s a very ordinary situation, but perhaps unexpected in a gallery. You might walk past and think ‘Why is this here?’ ‘Is it an artwork?’ ‘Can I sit at this table?’ We momentarily forget that this is an exhibition that overturns the convention ‘do not touch’. An architect or design nerd might recognise that the table and stools were designed by the Finnish modernist architect Alvar Aalto in the 1930s. But this wouldn’t explain ‘why’ it is here.

This is clever; it plays on our expectations of behaviour in a gallery. And then, if you do sit down, you start to feel under the table, to the surface that even non-blind people can’t see. But they can touch. What are these things underneath? There are lumps that feel squidgy. Chewing gum? Urgh! It’s like being back at school. Is this the art piece?

In fact, they are made of silicon, but being pink and white they resemble – and more importantly, feel like – chewing gum. Little stalactites on the underside of the table. The artist is playing games with us, surely, evoking memories. And while the bits of discarded ‘chewing gum’ form a kind of irregular pattern towards the edge of the table, if we delve further under, into the shadows, we might – if nudged – recognise that the lumps form characters of an over-sized braille. And the braille, we are told (because even the braille readers amongst us struggle to decode the message), spells out the word ‘inhibition’. A kind of hidden language. Which, of course, braille is, even for many people registered blind. And the artist, as a braille user, enjoys the perversity of an oversize braille that echoes the initial refusal of the object to be ‘read’ as art.

Now everybody’s feeling underneath the table, and the work has become a kind of performance piece. It gathers people together, as a place to sit in little groups, to rest and exchange ideas and share experiences, even with complete strangers. We are accidently touching each other’s fingers whilst reaching under the table, which is both funny and awkward. Inhibitions are being challenged in the shadows. The artist is using ordinary, everyday things that go unnoticed, but making them extra-ordinary. As some of us know, if you rely on touch to find your way to a table, you have to feel for where the edge of the table is, and, through proximity, where your stool is relative to the table, which often involves touching the underneath of tables more than a sighted person would. Lifting the stools to move closer, to feel that proximity, we begin to notice that each stool has a lump of chewing gum between each of their curved plywood legs.

If you can get over that initial revulsion, you keep wanting to press and deform the silicon lumps. And while the fact that it is a facsimile of chewing gum takes away the retch-reflex, it does engage memories of school desks, doesn’t it? And it has a multisensory aspect we haven’t talked about yet. The smell, oh yes, the smell. I thought I smelled something. So what is that smell? It’s kind of minty.

End of Stop 9, Track 2.

Additional track

Exhibition

Find out more about Beyond the Visual, the UK’s first major sculpture exhibition in which blind and partially blind practitioners are central to the curatorial process and make up the majority of participating artists.

Beyond the Visual
Close up of hands holding a plaster digestive biscuit with braille text and lettering reading 'comma'. Many more biscuits are on the table in front, featuring a variety of different words.

Exhibition

Beyond the Visual

Learn more

Sculpture Galleries and Study Gallery
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds

Audio guide

Discover more works in the exhibition with our audio guide.