Saturday, 15 May 2021

Threadbare: Jonathan Baldock Huguette Caland Jeffrey Gibson Tau Lewis

 
Jonathan Baldock - Eating Feelings (a conversation), 2020 (detail)
 
 
Another strong exhibition at Stephen Friedman in which textiles and processes traditionally considered craft are elevated to the status of art. The four artists in Threadbare explore issues such as gender, identity, race and sexuality through a range of textile techniques in their own particular styles. Elements of the artwork displayed recalled that of Frances Upritchard's Wetwang Slack seen at the Barbican in 2019 (here).

Huguette Caland - Inaash, (dress #7) c. 1970 
 
 
Huguette Caland's kaftans made in the 1970s directly challenge taboos associated with the representation of female sexuality. While living in Beirut in the 1960s, Caland rejected the western-influenced fashions worn by her peers in favour of loose-fitting kaftans inspired by the abaya, a form of traditional Arabic dress. At a time when the emphasis was on being tall and thin, Caland offered a liberating embrace of the female physique for women who did not conform to these societal pressures. In this vein, the dresses on view in ‘Threadbare’ conceal the body, instead drawing attention to abstract embroidery and detailed crochet patterns animated by the wearer’s movement.
 




The Last (dress #6), 1975

Rossinante, 2005-2011











Rossinante Under Cover X (Red, Orange, Black), 2011

 

 

Jonathan Baldock - Eating feelings (a conversation), 2020
 
 
Jonathan Baldock’s recent work uses puppetry, quilt-making and embroidery to reveal the malleable quality of the human body and its connection with the inner psyche. Baldock believes “in the power of making things through the bringing together of head and hand,” contesting the sentimentality associated with craft and the hand-made. ‘Eating feelings (a conversation)’ captures a pair of life-sized marionettes engaged in animated dialogue. Assuming the role of puppet master, Baldock breathes life into inanimate forms by using casts of his own body and arduous physical processes such as hand-embroidery. 
 
 


All bodies are good bodies, 2021
 


I'm often silent when I'm screaming inside, 2019
 
 
Jeffrey Gibson - 'Hushi', 2021
 
 
Drawing on his Choctaw-Cherokee heritage, JeffreyGibson’s work engages Native American materials and process in relation to popular culture.His work in ‘Threadbare’ combines intricate indigenous artisanal handcraftapplied in wearable garments, beadwork and patterned quiltswith narratives of contemporary resistance in protest slogans and song lyrics in a “blend of confrontation and pageantry”. Gibson harnesses the power of such materials and techniques to activate overlooked histories, while also embracing the presence of marginalised identities in today's society.
 
 
POWER!, 2018
 
Speak To Me So That I Can Understand, 2018
 
 MY HEART BEATS FOR THE ONE I LOVE, 2021 
 
 
Tau Lewis - Harmony, 2021
 
 
Tau Lewis sews and builds complex sculptures and quilts that engage with personal trauma. Found materials such as leather are used to respond to the legacy of the Black diaspora. Lewis's recent textile works - described by the artist as "celestial bodies" - act as spiritual conduits between the past, present and future. The transformative quality of Lewis' work speaks to her interest in outsider artist from the Black South. She explains that "objects (which) come from the post-slavery era are made largely out debris, refuge  and garbage. I consider them fossils containing the emotional generational DNA of the entire community. I believe that by studying certain art objects and tendencies toward new thinking in the black community, you can learn a lot about mobility, pictorial memory, trauma, and how to recover."
 
 

The Leg of the Hen, 2020
 

Sword of War, 2020
 

Dumah, 2021
 



Threadbare: Jonathan Baldock Huguette Caland Jeffrey Gibson Tau Lewis
until 15th May
Stephen Friedman Gallery
25-28 Old Burlington Street 
London
W1 

Sunday, 9 May 2021

William Tillyer: Watercolours

Reflections on the Esk The Mulgrave Watercolours, 2019
 
 
I came across this exhibition purely by chance whilst on my way to another. I stopped to take it in however, as the bold, painterly, splashy brushstrokes seen through the gallery window really appealed, moving me in much the same way that those of Jessica Rankin's did which I'd seen a few days previously (in my last post). Most of the works in this exhibition reference Tillyer's extensive travels, evoking English and foreign landscapes in both representational and abstract imagery. The brushstrokes and saturated colours here were both bold and yet beautifully nuanced. The white watercolour paper background and translucent watercolour medium in which they were executed gave the colours an almost luminous quality like stained glass seen in the sunshine, which really enhanced their appeal. I couldn't help but draw parallels with the dreamy watercolours of JMW Turner which were equally as evocative of a sense of place and climatic conditions. Turner was innovative in his day in his use of technique and application of paint, and I saw something similar here too in Tillyer's paintingThe Bedford Hills where he cuts V shapes into the painted paper and paints the reverse, he then peels these back to disrupt the rhythms and textures of the picture surface adding a completely new dimension to the painting. Sometimes chance encounters are the most rewarding.
 
 
 
Englishman's Bay, 2003
 

 
Englishman's Bay, 2003 (details)
 


Installation View

Zephyr - Claude, 2019
 
Zephyr - Stratos Cumulus, 2019

 
The Corsham Iris 1, 2019
 
The Corsham Iris 2, 2019
 
The Corsham Iris 3, 2019
 
 
Esk Bridge 7, 1980

Palm Trees Near Antibes 1, 1983
 
The Bedford Hills, 2001

 
The Age of Anxiety/The Kerry Sunset Watercolours, 2002
 
Fallingwater Variation 26, 1993

Air Wind Light Water, The Fall Cape Cod, 2009

Falling Sky Dropping Fatness on the Earth, 2012

The Watering Place, 2013
 
Hebrus, 2015
 
 
For A. O./Articulations, 2017
 
Reflections on the Esk The Mulgrave Watercolours, 2019
 



William Tillyer Watercolours
exhibition closed 24th April
Bernard Jacobson Gallery
28 Duke Street
St James's
London
SW1