Friday, 28 June 2019

Alison Watt: A Shadow on the Blind

Alison Watt - Peale, 2018


A little bit of calm after the drama of Oscar Murillo's Kettle's Yard show was to be found just off Oxford Street, where it was so wonderful to see a second show of Alison Watt's serene, largely monochromatic works at Parafin. Works from her 2016 show - The Sun Never Knew How Wonderful It Was, can be found here.


"Watt’s paintings of the last fifteen years have focussed primarily on images of draped cloth, using this motif to explore ideas about the human body through an interplay of presence and absence. However, in what represents a significant shift in her practice, Watt’s new works constitute an interrogation of the genre of still life. The starting point for this body of work was an extended meditation upon Thomas Warrender’s Still Life (1708) in the Scottish National Gallery, a trompe-l’oeil depiction of a letter rack and the only known oil painting by the artist. Many of the objects that appear in Warrender’s painting, such as feathers, envelopes and folded pieces of paper, reappear in Watt’s paintings but are rendered strange by being located in a neutral space. While Watt’s paintings appear at first to be monochrome, close inspection reveals them to be full of profoundly delicate modulations of colour and light, articulated through her carefully worked surfaces. In her paintings, the sheets of paper are blank, as if awaiting a message, or as if the writing they once bore has been erased. The envelopes, which carry letters, bear no addresses. In art history feathers are often associated with freedom or heightened spirituality, but they are also cut into quills, instruments of communication.


A second source of inspiration was the Modernist photography of Margaret Watkins, a Scottish-Canadian artist known primarily for her work in American advertising in the 1920s and 1930s. Like Thomas Warrender, Watkins was much influenced by Dutch still-life painting. She made a highly original series of works using domestic objects, including a length of rubber shower hose, and this inspired Watt’s series of works depicting coils of tubing. The title of the exhibition is a phrase from Joe Mulholland, Margaret Watkin’s neighbour in Scotland, who said that he only knew that she was in, as she was so quiet and discrete, when he saw her shadow on the blind drawn across her window. In this way, the exhibition addresses Watt’s enduring theme, the dichotomy of presence and absence."


Installation view

Alison Watt - Columba, 2018

 Alison Watt - Warrender, 2016
 Alison Watt - Volute, 2018

  Alison Watt - Helical, 2017

Alison Watt - Feather, 2018

 Alison Watt - Colyer, 2016-17

 Alison Watt - Dolphin, 2018

 Alison Watt - Quarto, 2017

 Alison Watt - Reversed Canvas, 2017


 Alison Watt - Letter, 2018

Alison Watt - Easter, 2018

Alison Watt - Cartellino, 2017




Alison Watt: A Shadow on the Blind
until 13th July
Parafin
18 Woodstock Street
London

Monday, 24 June 2019

Oscar Murillo: Violent Amnesia

violent amnesia, 2014-2018

Thinking of these two words together, they are like magnets repelling each other. It's about a constant jarring. The title has to do with the idea that the world is upside down. You can see this in the painting, and the West is missing - the US and Europe. Then you have the images of birds coming from the north, suggesting an invasion of sorts. The title, violent amnesia, is trying to capture this idea of forgetting, but doing it in a way that is not easy. I try hard to keep a balance in my work between desire to think primarily about image-making, texture, form and so on, and this constant awareness of the world, which is something that comes naturally to me. What's happening in Venezuela, the exodus of people leaving to enter Colombia for instance. The exhibition title is also about knowing that what I want to express can never be fully realised, can never be fully imagined. - Oscar Murillo



Whilst in Cambridge I visited Kettle's Yard for this show by Oscar Murillo. It was full of canvases of densely layered, imagery and frenetic mark making, reminiscent of Rauschenberg and Twombly. There were also blackened canvases covering the floor of one gallery and an installation of church pews in another which appeared to have suffered an episode of violence. There was so much energy here, and Murillo had chosen a boat painting by Alfred Wallis from the Kettle's Yard collection to echo the theme of migration and movement. Wallis's boat sailed on calmly, navigating its way through the turbulence of this exciting exhibition. I want to catch Murillo's concurrent show at David Zwirner in London now.



violent amnesia, 2019


The Institute of Reconciliation, 2014 - ongoing


violent amnesia, 2014-2018

violent amnesia, 2014-2018 details



The Institute of Reconciliation, 2014 - ongoing

The Institute of Reconciliation, 2014 - ongoing detail


untitled (law), 2018-2019

untitled (law), 2018-2019 detail

untitled, 2015-2016 


surge, 2017-2018


organisms from all countries unite, 2016

organisms from all countries unite, 2016

organisms from all countries unite, 2016

organisms from all countries unite, 2016


(untitled) catalyst, 2018-19
(untitled) catalyst, 2018-19

(untitled) catalyst, 2018-19

(untitled) catalyst, 2018-19

The Institute of Reconciliation, 2014 - ongoing



 (untitled) catalyst, 2018-19


 Alfred Wallis (1855-1942) French lugsail fishing boat, undated






Oscar Murillo: Violent Amnesia
until 23rd June
Kettle's Yard
Castle Street
Cambridge