Ready for their close up! Lepidopterae (here).
Friday, 12 April 2019
Tuesday, 9 April 2019
Mark Wallinger: The World Turned Upside Down
I happened across this large sculptural installation - The World Turned Upside Down, 2019 by artist Mark Wallinger just off Kingsway at The London School of Economics. It's a giant 4 metre high globe with the countries inverted and most now sitting in the southern hemisphere and oceans re-labelled to adopt to their new orientation on the map. The title of the work comes from a famous ballad of the English Revolution, and sums up the ideals of the Digger Community:
Wallinger also states “The UN is the authority as to the names and borders. This is the
world, as we know it from a different viewpoint. Familiar, strange, and
subject to change.” An appropriate reflection of the times perhaps.
You may also like to read about my favourite Mark Wallinger sculpture which was on public display in the capital exactly two years ago this month here.
Mark Wallinger: The World Turned Upside Down
Saw Swee Hock Student Centre
London School of Economics and Political Science
Houghton Street
London
WC2A 2AESaturday, 6 April 2019
El Anatsui: Material Wonder
Rehearsal, 2017
"I was playing with this idea of a 'fabric' as something that's not fixed. The folds in the material have their own way of running - I don't create them - they happen naturally, by themselves. The amazing thing about working with these 'fabrics' is that every time you display one of them it becomes an entirely new work of art." - El Anatsui.
More dazzling beauties from artist El Anatsui in his ongoing series of shimmering metallic 'cloths' created from the humblest of recycled materials - bottle tops - which warp and buckle like organic sculptures on the October Gallery walls. They are dynamic in their impact through their colourful, disruptive pattern designs. So pleased to have caught this show before it closes today.
Rehearsal, 2017 (details)
Change in Fortune, 2018
Untitled (from the Circular Series), 2016
Untitled (from the Circular Series), 2016
Blue Metallic Eclipse, 2016 and Untitled Carmine Eclipse, 2016
Iris, 2012
Gudali, 2017
El Anatsui: Material Wonder
until 6th April
October Gallery
24 Old Gloucester Street
London
WC1N
Monday, 1 April 2019
The Lepidopterist's Lair
I was the latest artist in the fold to be invited by the Rowley Gallery to showcase my work in their window space. And to this end a swarm of butterflies has taken flight across the city, migrating from my studio and alighted in their temporary new home - the Rowley Gallery shopfront which I've turned into a lepidopterarium - butterfly house - for the month of April. It's a show I've called the Lepidopterist's Lair, although there are also a smattering of new damselfly artworks thrown in for good measure. Each and every butterfly is individually hand-cut, and their shapes are taken from real species as opposed to a generic butterfly shape which distinguishes my pieces. The act of individually cutting each of these butterflies is akin to a meditation, an extension of my own spiritual practices. A labour of love.
Pilot
Sweetheart Neckline
Winter appears to have finally loosened its grip, and the trees are blossoming, signalling the passage of the seasons has now slipped into a much more welcoming Spring - Primavera. It being appropriate to the new season, the spirit of rebirth, and the month of April, I have created a new copper leafed dress - Sweetheart Neckline - which takes its inspiration from the floral gown of the figure Flora, goddess of flowers, and the season of Spring depicted in Sandro Botticelli's painting - Primavera (1477–1482) above. Sweetheart Neckline compliments Mandarin Collar (gold leaf) below, another dress available at the Rowley Gallery.
Guiseppe Penone - Breath 5, 1978
Sospiri
This new piece Sospiri, takes its title from Edward Elgar's musical piece Sospiri (Sigh), and is a reference to the act and rhythms of natural breathing, and mindful breathwork in yogic and meditative practices. Sospiri was also inspired by seeing Guiseppe Penone's sculpture Breath 5, an artwork concerned with the act of exhalation in the Tate Gallery. I love the fact that he has transformed breath - something so ethereal and intangible - into such a concrete, sculptural mass.
Oscillate
Some of the smaller pieces below are one-off creations made specially for this exhibition and will not be made again at this scale unless specifically commissioned. Contact the Rowley Gallery here if you would like to reserve specific pieces or to commission an artwork, otherwise do come and view them whilst they are available if you can before they flutter off.
Lineate (Copper)
Oscillate (Copper)
Cipher
The Lepidopterist's Lair installation views
The Lepidopterist's Lair
until 30th April 2019
The Rowley Gallery
115 Kensington Church Street
Kensington
London W8
Telephone: 020 7727 6495
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)








































































