Sunday, 13 December 2020

Chiharu Shiota: Navigating the Unknown

 

"I check my phone first thing in the morning, I read any new emails, I check message on my social media, I listen to voicemails. Each day we are targeted with an endless amount of information. It has never been easier to receive information from all over the world. But all the information changes all the time. I watch the news with my family every day. The volume of information is like a wave, swallowing my body. It is difficult to orient oneself in this new world. Where is the surface in this ocean of information? Our human body is not adapting and changing at the same speed, so it is becoming more complex to find the real meaning of life. What is our purpose? Where is our destination in life? People believe that death is our ultimate destination and the end of life, but I believe time is a circular construct, and when we die, our consciousness transcends into another dimension. There is no beginning or end. The boats float within the space, like a body floating in water. Each line is like an emotion. Using threads, lines and rope is something that allows me to explore breath and space like a line in a painting. An accumulation of black lines forms a surface like the night sky which gradually expands into the Universe. But what if it is rather the bottom of the ocean. There is no light at the bottom, everything is black. The architectural shape of the boat lets the passengers only move forward. We struggle to define our path, our human condition forces us to look forward searching for a destiny although we have no safe points of orientation, we travel on the open ocean without a sense of direction." - Chiharu Shiota

 


With the month-long lockdown 2.0 thankfully ended, I discovered that there was a new installation by Chiharu Shiota in town. Making haste, I hot-footed it to König Gallery (a new gallery to me), to see Navigating the Unknown. It was another of Shiota's hauntingly ethereal thread installations like that seen last year at the now closed Blain Southern gallery (here). The main focus of Navigating the Unknown is a trio of deserted boats, suspended and cast adrift in a sea of black string. It raises questions. Where are, and what happened to the pilots of these vessels? Shiota evokes the mystery of the Mary Celeste - a brigantine ship discovered similarly abandoned by its crew adrift with everything on board otherwise undisturbed and intact in 1872. The mood of this installation with the stark black of the thread and vessels also brought to mind images of the mythological boatman Charon transporting the souls of the dead on their final journey across the River Styx. The sense of mystery and evocations, encouraging a narrative and storytelling in the mind of the viewer are the strength of Shiota's installations. This sense of mystery also pervades her smaller boxed sculptures containing sacred and secular objects shrouded in impossibly, dense webs of thread. This exhibition also gives visitors a chance to examine Shiota's thought process and idea development through her drawings executed in her severe, powerful red and black colour palette. The two beautifully nuanced textural thread paintings on canvas here resemble expansive NASA pictures of distant galaxies and star systems, or microscopic tissue samples seen on slides from a biology lab. They had me excited for the possibilities of further exploration with my own works involving stich and thread (here).

 

 
 
 




















 

 
 
 




 

 

Chiharu Shiota: Navigating the Unknown
until 19th December
König London
259-269 Old Marylebone Road
London 
NW1 5RA

Sunday, 6 December 2020

The Rowley Gallery: A Window Full of Wonderful!

 
Rêve
 
 
I have work in another end of year show besides that at Cambridge.  The Rowley Galley in Kensington have created a "Window Full of Wonderful", giving the window space over to their fantastic stable of gallery artists in the annual end of year group exhibition.
 
 
A "Window Full of Wonderful" at The Rowley Gallery
 
Gloriole

Sospiri
 

 
I am represented in the window with a version of Gloriole, the circular gold-leaf artwork hanging on the wall, to the right of the picture. I also have a minimalist all-white version of Sospiri in the gallery. I have also delivered a smaller version of my recently created Rêve piece (top). You can read the story of the inspiration behind the creation of the Rêve artworks here. Rêve measures 23cm x 23cm in an ash wood white box frame - an ideal stocking-filler for anybody looking to start an art collection. A larger gold-leaf version (50cm x 50cm, of Rêve, below), is also available from Rowley Gallery, contact them for further details, or about the availability of other artworks of mine (here). The Rowley Gallery Christmas group show runs until  the 18th December. Go on, treat yourself to a visit, you deserve it after a year like this!
 
 
Rêve 
 
 
 
 
Christmas Show
until 18th December
The Rowley Gallery
115 Kensington Church Street
London
W8 7LN
Tel: 020 7727 6495

Sunday, 29 November 2020

Nicolas Party: Butterflies Through Other Eyes #54

Nicolas Party - Portrait with One Butterfly, 2019


Portraits with butterflies by contemporary artist Nicolas Party, known for his colour-saturated art installations.


Frogs and Butterflies Portrait

 Portrait with Five Butterflies

 Portrait with Mushrooms

  Portrait with Snake

Salamander Portrait

Portrait with Roses

Sunday, 22 November 2020

Rashid Johnson: Waves

 

"I had gotten sober in 2014 and I started making [the Broken Men series] in 2015 as a response to living in a world that I didn't know how to live in without drugs and alcohol. That was paralleled by the killing of Mike Brown, Donald Trump running for president and the global refugee crisis [...] I felt like my eyes had just opened [...] A lot of my work is dealing with historical narratives and the autobiographic: What's my story? How does it fit into these historical narratives? I was making a project that was quite timeless in a sense. But the work, upon me becoming sober, started to look at the world that we were living in at the time. It was really kind of a shock. There was no more buffer. I had no escape tool, I didn't have the fluid that I had used to perform my escape. And so the work started showing a different urgency by speaking to time in a way that it hadn't so much prior. " - Rashid Johnson

   

Rashid Johnson came to prominence in the art world with his Anxious Men series of paintings. What better show to go visit then (in the period between the original lockdown and the current lockdown 2.0), in a year full of high anxiety, than Johnson's latest show Waves at Hauser & Wirth. Waves features Johnson's new Broken Crowd series of works in the first of the gallery spaces, which examine states of toxic masculinity in certain contemporary males. These works are huge paintings of block-headed figures. The size and colour of these paintings certainly make an impact within the gallery space. They are busy, collaged compositions, consisting of overpainted ceramic tiles, cracked mirrors and shaped, branded, wooden inserts. As a result the reflective surfaces of these works seems to shimmer and dazzle. Perhaps these fractured surfaces are meant to be a reflection of, or glimpses of the psyche, and the stress and anxiety that these figures are feeling. Johnson's iconography and elements of his technique reminded me of that of Jean-Michel Basquiat (previously on this blog here), but these figures seemed to be more constrained, being confined within uniform, grid-like constructions on the surface of the paintings.













 

"Johnson updates the visual language of his long-established Anxious Men in new works as part of his Anxious Red Paintings series, which began as drawings made during and in reaction to the global lockdown, leading Johnson to produce expansive oil paintings. Using oil on linen and a blood red medium for the first time to depict the deceptively crude archetypal faces, Johnson has captured the ‘life and death’ urgency that has separated and connected communities around the globe. This red pigment, entitled Anxious Red, was created specially by Johnson for these paintings. The opacity and slippery texture of the medium itself brings a mobility to the works: a nod to the importance of movement and gesture within Johnson’s oeuvre. Just as Johnson selects his typical materials and tools – such as shea butter and black soap – for the importance of their historical narratives, here he has chosen to use the canonically significant, and universally recognisable, medium of oil paint in order to communicate his message all the more urgently. As Johnson himself says, ‘this body of works does not hide from its ambition to be understood’. As such, his Anxious Red Paintings can be read as history paintings for our times." - Hauser & Wirth.

 

I then moved into the second of the Hauser & Wirth spaces which housed this collection of Johnson's Anxious Red paintings. These were all painted during the self-distancing of the first lockdown earlier this year. There was very little difference in the rows of grids and anxious faces of the paintings here which seemed to dull the impact of the sense of anger and anxiety felt by the figures during the initial lockdown due to the COVID virus.  What did resonate though were the grids in the paintings that confined the faces. This echoed the experience we all had of being confined to our homes and the sense of cabin-fever which had us all on edge in our imposed isolation. Although these paintings appeared to be loosely painted, and vigorous in style, there was a sense of calm in this gallery space because of the limited, unifying red colour palette. The colour of these paintings - "Anxious Red" is a specially formulated colour made to Johnson's specifications in the similar way Yves Klein had the bespoke colour Yves Klein Blue created for his artworks. This exhibition will hopefully resume its run at the beginning of December.

 










Rashid Johnson: Waves
until 23rd December
Hauser & Wirth
23 Savile Row
London
 
(Please note that viewing hours for this exhibition have ended temporarily in light of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic).