Sunday, 19 November 2023

Emily Young: Pareidolia in Stone

Emily Young - The Teacher, (detail)


"Pareidolia has been defined as the tendency for perception to impose a meaningful interpretation on a nebulous stimulus, usually visual – as in animal forms in clouds. This is based in early awareness mechanisms for seeing and avoiding danger in our ancestors; those who were more aware of two potentially dangerous eyes in a shaded wood were more likely to survive. I free-carve stone, tiny pieces of the planet; I find them in quarries, in stone yards, or in places of geological interest, including the hillside I live on in Southern Tuscany. I work with pieces that speak to me in some way. They may have interesting forms in their structures, or wonderful colours, or evocative figurations on their surfaces. Guided by the stones, I carve them into heads, torsos and discs. I put into them something of my own mind, seeing in them the history of the creation of the planet, which can then touch on the creation of our solar system, and beyond. I am also alive to the connection between all matter. It seems industrialisation has caused us to misread the planet we live on, and our relationship to it, which is in fact one of complete dependence, no separation. It is a kind of pareidolia, where we see something in nature to exploit, that we hope will improve our capacity to live safely. We have seen the planet as a mindless resource, to be used and abused, whereas in fact it is the great creator of every part of our being and deserving of the uttermost respect. These sculptures call to our inner knowledge of who we might be, showing a quietness, a kind of stillness carried in the stone, an understanding that we are children of a magical planet, which gives life and meaning to everything. They show a profound gratitude for the gift of life, and deep compassion for all our fellow creatures and life forms, manifesting as unmitigated respect for our Great Mother Planet." - Emily Young, Santa Croce, September 2023


Emily Young's body of work (previously here) is so beautiful. I always take time to view those situated outside of Tate Modern when visiting. This is the first time I have seen them exhibited at the Richard Green Gallery though, and they were in very good company situated among a selection of Ben Nicholson paintings and Henry Moore maquettes. Sculptor Young really knows her materials and has an instinctive feeling for creating in whatever stone she chooses to work with. These monumental, dreamy heads exploit the natural flaws, fissures and pattern in a variety of stones to create imposing and majestic sculptures. They are like ancient carvings excavated from an earlier culture. Young's Chthonic Head series illustrated below certainly refer to ancient Greek mythologies. These sculptures have a calming presence, unaware of the viewers gaze, they are lost in their own reveries, possessing a real sense of the ethereal. There is spirit in these stones.


Bear Mountain Flight

Still Water

Ben Nicholson - August 63 (Metallic)

Ben Nicholson - August 58 (2Circles and Green)

Walking in Stone

Sun's Daughter

Chthonic Head II

Jeu De La Terre


Daughter of the Sky II

Chthonic Head V

Poet Warrior


Desert Sentinel I


Dream Time



Moon Torso III

Small Macauba Torso III

Cave Song III


Chthonic Head I



Cave Song II

Chthonic Head IV

Cave Song I


Henry Moore - Maquette for Figure on Steps

Black Swan I

Henry Moore - Family Group

Small Crystal Wind Head

The Teacher


Socrates

Aminth (Head of a Boy)

Chthonic Head III

Moon Torso IV

The Teacher

Daughter of the Sky II






Emily Young: Pareidolia in Stone
until 17th November
Richard Green Gallery
33 New Bond Street
London
W1S

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