| |
STILL LIFE, STILL
Franko B, Tony Carter, Gordon Cheung,
Oliver Clegg, Brian Griffiths, Anne Hardy, Dan Hays, Michael
Landy, Alastair Mackie, Robin Mason, Hugh Mendes, Lisa Milroy,
Polly Morgan, Boo Ritson, Amikam Toren
Curated by Hugh Mendes
Private View: Tues 9th Oct
6-9pm
Still Life, Still’ features the work of 14 contemporary
artists in a time-honoured genre, and proposes that the still
life, despite its reticence, remains extremely relevant to
contemporary art and that the genre still has the power to
address questions of meaning by providing a platform to reflect
upon the human condition. Traditionally, we think of the objects
in still life as windows into the customs and ideas of their
time; but they also confront death head-on, and a contemporary
still life has the ability to express present-day religious
and philosophical ideas. Meditation on inanimate objects,
as presented through the sensibilities of the artist, can
communicate a profound sense of stillness, as if their depiction
had frozen time. The history of still life has, of course,
provided some of the greatest pleasures and offered some of
the most profound meditations on mortality in the history
of art, from Caravaggio to Chardin, Cezanne, or for Cubists
Picasso and Braque. Duchamp’s readymade, the repositioning
of an everyday object, has had an immeasurable effect on contemporary
culture.
When Michael Landy followed his notorious ‘Breakdown’
performance (during which he publicly destroyed all his personal
property) with etchings of weeds, it was perhaps surprising.
An almost brutal existentialism was followed with the delicacy
and precision of his etchings (of the overlooked, unwanted
and discarded). Lisa Milroy and Tony Carter describe themselves,
and perhaps are best known, as ‘still life’ artists.
They provide a backdrop in relation to the painted object
and the object itself, unmediated. Whereas Franko B, best
known for his performance work, has produced beautiful and
poignant photos of the detritus of homeless people around
Waterloo, creating ‘found’ still lifes. Amikam
Toren deconstructs and represents objects, in series that
take place over years. Perhaps the thing that all these artists
have in common is the level of precision in the execution
of their ideas.
Featuring painting, photography, sculpture and printmaking,
‘Still Life, Still’ will offer a wide-ranging
perspective, through a traditional lens, on contemporary mores
and aspirations.
Hugh Mendes (2007)
T 1+2 Gallery
17 Hereford Street
London E2 6EX
+44 (0) 20 7729 8218
www.t12artspace.com
|
|