Tuesday, 12 November 2024

ING DISCERNING EYE 2024

 

ING DISCERNING EYE 2024:  PAUL CAREY-KENT’S NOTES ON HIS CHOSEN ARTISTS



On view at the Mall Galleries, London 

Admission free

Friday 15 - Saturday 23 November, 10am - 5pm, Sunday 24, 10am - 1pm

I am one of six selectors for this year's show...

When I’m attracted to art it typically operates like this: something draws me in visually; it turns out that there’s an idea involved; that proves interesting; and the combination of form and idea isn’t something I’ve seen in quite that way before. That ought, in turn, to mean that the work is worth writing about. The works I’ve chosen are a mixture of artists I’ve invited (about whom I tend to have written before) and anonymously chosen open call selections (most of whom I haven’t written about previously). Either way, I’m setting out to provide some 50 words on each of my chosen works - both to test my own instincts and to give viewers one possible way in. Looking across my 120-odd choices from some 55 artists, I believe they demonstrate the substance I seek. Yet most of the artists don’t have a gallery to represent them: evidence both of the current depth of artistic ability, and of why it isn’t easy to make a living through art. So I hope both that visitors enjoy the work, and that the artists sell as well as they deserve!

I have illustrated one work by each artist (and indicated in brackets if there are more works by the artist - the more works, in general, the longer the text).  

The easiest way to see - and buy! - work in my section is to go to  https://ingdeexhibition.org/gallery/paul-carey-kent

The 'Artists' Opening' on 14 November was lively: I managed to get some shots of artists with their work, added below. 


Talar Aghbashian


Untitled / Huggling statues, 2024                (+3)

Born in Beirut of West Armenian descent and now based in London, Talar Aghbashian is a painter who explores the human relationship to the landscape, and the projection of one onto the other. Her large paintings use layering to muddle our understanding of what is and isn’t present now, and what might or might not have been present before – consistent with wondering what has occurred in a psychologically charged place – and context is often a site of conflict. Landscape, body and still life become conflated. These smaller works achieve related effects more simply. Are those really huggling statues, or is that just a pareidolian interpretation of mountains? And do statues anyway have the agency to hug?  Is that a horse’s tail, or a flow of water suggesting it? Are we looking at natural formations or human constructions in the untitled works?

Emma Alcock

 

Rectangle with Line II, 2017

Emma Alcock’s meditative painting generates its quiet presence through the patient application of veils of paint to form what seem on the one hand like hovering abstractions, on the other possible shorthand for everyday objects. Might ‘Rectangle with Line II’ show a straight vase on one of two table tops in skewed perspective? Even taking it literally, we might wonder what the line is – if the vertical, isn’t that more a slim rectangle?  If the horizontal, why isn’t it ‘rectangles’ plural? 

 

Nibras Al-Salman

 

Fading Colours, 2023


What is this pile of ceramic and stoneware? The aftermath of a collapse? Perhaps, but surely there is more than plausible underlying order to the sequencing of black and white elements. Nibras Al-Salman came here from Iraq, and says that ‘Fading Colours’ explores the fragile and fragmented memory of a culture from which he has been physically distant for several decades. That’s why the porcelain sheets, imprinted with a pattern inspired by Middle Eastern abstract geometric art, are fragmented and incomplete, as memories become.

 

  

Richard Baker

Sideboard 3, 2024                (+1)

I like a nice ‘figuration works as abstraction’ moment, and Richard Baker delivers that in ‘Sideboard 3’ and ‘Unit 5’. He characterises them as part of ‘an investigation into the hidden human histories behind seemingly insignificant objects. Often ignored, they bear witness to sensuous activity, be it remembered, lived, forgotten, or mythologised. In these modestly scaled works, the depicted objects are presented dislocated from their conventional domestic settings and isolated within an intangible space.’  At the same time, if these were pure abstractions, we might look to Donald Judd and Piet Mondrian respectively.

 

Ingrid Berthon-Moine 


All Thrills in the Middle, 2024            (+2)

Ingrid Berthon-Moine works in drawing, sculpture and installation to explore the physical and cultural dimensions of the human body. Taking inspiration from diverse sources such as language, psychoanalysis, and feminism, she weaves personal narratives into her work, challenging conventional understandings of such human experiences as sex, illness, and death. Here she shows what might be called drawings, but with added sculptural elements. They make for a double playfulness: in the use of materials, and in how they address such tropes of sexuality as the oyster as aphrodisiac and the surrealist equation between nipples and eyes. What’s the difference between pushing a button and teasing a pompon? More seriously, as she says, her hybrid, manifold subjects ‘signal new subjectivities, hierarchies and anatomies’.

Samantha Beck

 'Rust women' Judith Burrows and Samantha Beck 

Harvest Moon, 2022

Inspired by the sea-battered steel groynes on Southwick beach, the Brighton-based artist Samantha Beck draws with rust. Her title, ‘Harvest Moon’, doesn’t just operate visually, but takes us back to the tidal source – and, specifically, to the autumnal equinox, when the full moon rises above the horizon much faster than usual.

 

G R Biermann

 

snow+concrete 14, 2022

German-born conceptual artist G Roland Biermann works across multiple media, often focussing on transformation. That presaged by the sculpturally presented photograph ‘snow+concrete 14’, as we assume the snow will melt. Perhaps there’s an implication that we will be stranded on an unsustainable ‘concrete island’ (to borrow from JG Ballard) once global warming has run its course.

 

Day Bowman

 

Flood and Ebb 3, 2023                (+1)

Growing up in a small, West-Country seaside town, says Day Bowman, ‘it is not surprising that much of my work has referenced the sea, the beach and littoral and, from an early age, I was acutely aware of the life of the seasons with the tsunami of summer visitors followed by the closed-up, out-of-season, winter months.’ She often echoes the marks, lines and shapes that children make on the beach, so that ‘the canvas becomes the beach that acted as the large- scale canvas of my childhood.’ Here ‘Flood and Ebb’ points towards the tides that play such a central role in that experience, while ‘Storage Facility 2’ reminds us of the infrastructure off-season.

Simona Brinkmann



 Some Kinda Kick, 2024                    (+2)

Simona Brinkmann is a sculptor who takes a feminist perspective on power structures, particularly as those power structure are built into architecture. So, when I asked her to make sculptures to go on plinths – not her usual style of presentation - I might have expected that she would undermine the historical expectations of how that should operate. Just so, instead of classical figures securely centred, we find jumbled oddments that seem too big for their plinth; eccentrically position themselves half-on, half-off; or even seem about to topple off completely. True, they include marble, but it’s rough-edged and dirty, reminding her of the municipal marble one finds in public spaces (walkways, monuments, and especially street name signs) from her time living in Rome and Milan. Collectively, they are the 'Cinch' series, Brinkmann explains, ‘as all the pieces feel to me like they have a relationship to the idea of the cinched body and an idea of architecture as enclosure’. As for what’s on the plinths, we might sense the body in space, but hemmed in, having to fit with restrictions – as well as being placed in a position of some precarity. Eccentric materials reinforce that: an orthopaedic corset, rubber car mats, stirrups. Yet what also emerges – it comes across as another surprise – is sculptural coherence.

 

Aisha Bridgman

 


Night Lights, 2024                        (+1)

Representation meets abstraction in the imagined landscapes of Aisha Bridgman’s lush acrylic paintings. She aptly describes her current series as ‘moon-soaked’, capturing their almost paradoxical combination of clarity and mystery, stillness and implied action: is someone about to look up that periscope, and at what? Is that a diving board under the night lights? If so, will there be a diver? Bridgman says her intention ‘is for the viewer to escape into and explore these otherworldly landscapes, with their linear structures and off-kilter habitats’, and I seem to have done just that…

 

Broughton & Birnie

 

Navigator, 2024

A giant treads the land, but gently, insubstantially, suggesting how matters ought to be navigated from a position of power. Kevin Broughton and Fiona Birnie make their paintings together: simultaneously on large works, or by taking turns on smaller works – such as this – hung on the same wall. They don’t consult, but aim to surprise each other: I wonder who came back to discover the other had added the legs to ‘Navigator’?


 

Judith Burrows

                                             

A Small Re-wilding_undeterred by inhospitable terrain, 2024        (+1)

Judith Burrows uses the antagonistic association of raw steel and organic elements to stand in for industry meeting nature, generating a sharply geometric fragility through controlled exposure to natural elements – she has her own way of ‘printing’ from plants onto steel. She is inspired by Cal Flynn’s book ‘Landscapes of Abandonment: Life in the Post-human Landscape’, which looks at nature’s ability to repair polluted and spoiled environments and survive through adaptation and re-invention.

See Samantha Beck for artist shot.

 

Tracey Bush

 Lost Wings of Summer, 2023

In ‘Lost Wings of Summer’, Tracey Bush presents 24 butterflies in an entomology case. It’s a natural history collection with a difference - a requiem for thirteen British species, five extinct, and eight on the endangered red list. Their colours have disappeared in advance of their full disappearance. Moreover, says Bush, ‘butterflies are amongst the first indicators of environmental change; these collections hope to highlight their frailty and diversity, as an alternative to a collection of actual specimens.’ 

 

Rebecca Byrne



              


Counting Clouds with Papa, 2024        (+3)

‘I spend so much time making these pastels’, says London-based American Rebecca Byrne, ‘erasing them back to the ground, starting again, and layering up marks and colours. Up close, they look like abstract gestures – one day that may just take over everything’. Here the marks still cohere clearly enough into trees, writhing with a hint of Van Gogh. If they look as if they could be beings with agency, that fits, as Byrne was reading modern takes on ancient Norse mythology while making this series, and the trees are the setting for the supernatural. She explains that ‘The Well of Urd is next to the trunk of the tree Yggdrasil. Urd is one of the Norns who live under the tree’s roots. Norns are goddesses of destiny and there are three: Urd, Verdandi and Skuld – legend has it that they are present at every child’s birth and determine the baby’s fate from day one.’

 

Jay Cee

                  

Alice, That Look, 2024        (+1)

Whoever lies behind the somewhat enigmatic initial name ‘Jay Cee’ has a persuasive way of setting painterly portraits into striking colour schemes animated by irruptions with an abstract quality. Alice, giving ‘that look’, is bisected by a doubly-triangular back drop with a surprise incursion from a smaller triangle. Does the title ‘Scarlet’ name the second model, or refer to how the chair’s redness has spread to the wall to give her a halo of sorts? Either way, she conveys a quieter personality.

 

Simon Chalmers

 

Greenhouse, Uploders Cemetery Allotment, Dorset, 2024

Simon Chalmers makes what one might call photographic models, wittily confusing the distinction between 2D and 3D - so this isn’t so much a group of photographs of a greenhouse, as a stage set made from photographs. Chalmers sees his range of such models as ‘three-dimensional moments, caught and preserved like solid memories forming a kind of geographical diary’.

Thomas Clare


                                           

I couldn't,  2023 

The title ‘I couldn’t’ does little to remove the mystery from Thomas Clare’s striking photograph. It seems to me a brother to Louise Ørsted Jensen’s drummer, in which case an encore might be being declined, but it isn’t necessarily a performance – it could be desuetude or a drugged state. Clare himself explains that the photo was taken in a psychiatric hospital that had burned down, and ‘was inspired by wanting to get better but realising you have no support, no home, no help’. 

William Cobbing


 Still from Will.ni.naiz, 2022

William Cobbing foregrounds clay performatively, exploiting its clagginess more radically than by making ceramics - most often by masking his protagonists – here himself - to striking, absurd and psychologically ambiguous effect. In ‘Will.ni.naiz’ (that’s ‘Will, I am’, but in Basque) the slapstick energy lands somewhere between attractive and repulsive, funny and disturbing... Is mutilation occurring, or is this a more benign revelation of the self?

  

Malcolm Crocker


Stages of Change, 2024        (+3)

Imagine a science fictional world in which we don’t build houses, we simply trigger their growth as if they came into being organically. That’s the impression given by Malcolm Crocker’s architectural landscapes, speculating on where the Anthropocene might take us. He says he is interested in how 'patterns of change, destruction, renewal, evolution, life and death are written into the geology and archaeology of our planet'. Perhaps his sci-fi-surreal cityscapes also reflect a little of his background in town planning which, unusually, preceded attendance at art college when he retired.  But the practical realities of granting permissions are no restriction on his irreal fantasies, which soar above the clouds or flatten down into aerial abstraction with no limits other than the imagination's. Perhaps they are landscapes of the mind? The ‘Stages of Change’ pair suggest that the building process may be ongoing, while the triangular ‘Sky Machines’ place the viewer at an unusual speculative angle.  

 

Theo Ellison

 


Still from Trinket, 2024

Theo Ellison’s film features a fire one could plausibly call apocalyptic, but for just the four factors: it’s only an artichoke burning; the flames have no destructive effect on the flesh of the vegetable; floating in the air, it is evidently a digital construct; and the title ‘Trinket’ is far from cataclysmic. That all fits with Ellison’s interest in employing the tropes of the romantic sublime in a modern, knowingly distanced, manner by setting it on a collision course with decidedly un-romantic digital processes. All the same, there is a certain beauty…

 

Bella Easton


 Bitten by Witch Fever 3, 2021

Bella Easton’s practice is founded in drawing, typically homing in on domestic details. Renovating her Victorian house in South-East London, she found a section of wall with the ghostly remains of a design that had seeped into the original plaster. She developed, replicated and reflected on this to generate an intensely gradated fabrication of the multiple relationships and contradictions between natural and artificial, open and closed, uncanny and familiar. The squares we see are lithographic prints each pressed twice onto paper-thin porcelain, in slightly different registrations, to form a version of the modernist grid. The Rorschach-like result is a coming-together that may look like one complete view, but is actually a doubling of two halves. The title ‘Bitten by Witch Fever’ refers to the arsenic found in 19th century wallpapers: William Morris described the doctors who attributed poisoning to his businesses as ‘bitten by witch fever’, wrongly insinuating that they were quacks – though he later accepted the case for arsenic-free papers.

 

Nogah Engler

 


Interval, 2024

Nogah Engler’s investigation of landscape starts from a particular point of ambivalence - an ongoing investigation of collective and personal memory related to her family, who lived in the Carpathian Mountains in the Ukraine. All except her father - who survived the Holocaust - were murdered during World War II. She has returned to Ukraine a number of times, and explains that ‘going back to that crime scene with its sublimely beautiful landscapes highlighted the paradox of the beauty against the bloody history of the place ‘– the more so as the locals were ‘extraordinarily friendly… How could the parents and grandparents of these people have been so cruel? What was the turning point? What is the thin veneer of culture? The place turned into a microcosm for me; a kind of laboratory where I could ask difficult questions about human morality in a way that was not time or place specific.’ Such questions are not on the surface of her paintings here, but knowing they are there explains their fragmentary nature – and, of course, they have an added resonance in our current age of incomprehensible aggressions.

 

Ben Fenton

 

Hearts and Thoughts No. 1 (The Observer Building, Hastings), 2024

South coast painter Ben Fenton is known for his distinctive depictions of brutalist architecture from the 60’s, with titles pointing to psychological undertones. Here he turns to an abandoned interior which now acts as an occasional art space – and it’s something of a personal choice, as I grew up with the Hastings & St Leonards Observer as my local paper. These days the paper is printed in Portsmouth, and the still-empty offices have hosted several art shows.

 

Archie Franks

 

City of Plymouth waltzer, 2022        (+1)                                                                                 

Archie Franks’ subject is the intersection of consumerism, leisure and Britishness. He tackles those with an awareness of the more poisonous and divisive aspects of national identity – as found an outlet in Brexit – but also an understanding of their nostalgic appeal. Here, then, we have a fairground ride, exciting by the standards of the pre-digital childhood experience; and a view of the archetypal English sport of cricket, based on his regular sourcebook of ‘chocolate box’ views, ‘Remarkable Village Cricket Grounds’. Moments of transcendence in the gloom.

 

Abi Freckleton

           

Brightly Feeds, 2023


Abi Freckleton’s ceramics find a novel way to channel the modernist tradition of repurposing the discarded. In general, as she puts it ‘Both material and photographic samples are excavated, broken down and then recombined along with clay, glaze, glass, paper and other components. Aggregated together and allowed to flow, these gatherings of matter take on their own new forms…. What past lives, meanings and memories are carried through time within these transitions?’ The works are rooted in specific experiences, which led her to write poems – I don’t have room here – that lead her into the sculptural work. She explains that Brightly feeds and Just sprung ground ‘are made in response to a moment in a forest in Bedfordshire and incorporate found puddle mud, photographs, footprints and remembered colours from that moment’. Last rays hang tight ‘was made in response to looking at the twilight sky. The feeling of being connected across hundreds of miles to beings for whom the night has not yet come’. And They lingered as softened holes ‘takes its title from the text documentation of a performative work made on a beach in Australia, at dawn.’

 

Rosie Gibbens

 


Stills from Micro-performances, 2021

Rosie Gibbens makes performances, videos and sculptures that feature her own body in various ways as a means of magnifying the absurdities of contemporary life, saying that ‘I often approach my work as an alien visitor attempting to participate seamlessly in contemporary life, but not quite managing’. She is particularly interested in gender performativity, sexual politics, consumer desire and the slippery overlaps between these. Here we see a collections of her ‘micro-performances – perverse interpretations of everyday actions that somehow muddle up the categories between, for example, housework and self-presentation and wellness. They serve both to amuse with their unexpectedness and also to suggest that what we regard as normal might also have its ridiculous side. Do we really question conventions?

Alastair Gordon

 

Prayer Match, 2020

Three matches taped to a board? No, but close examination is needed to clock this as a hyperreal painting – Alastair Gordon is a particularly dab hand at painting illusionistic tape, as he often does. That trick then gives way to considering the pattern of the wood grain, and how it might relate to the preceding smoke. Then back to the decision to depict three matches:  burned-out individuals or a Holy Trinity of sorts?

 

Tom Hackney

Chess Painting No.154 (Duchamp vs. Fleischer, New York, 1948), 2023             (+2)

In 1923, Marcel Duchamp announced – though not quite truly - that he had given up art in favour of chess, which he pursued to an international standard. Chess, like art, can be considered in terms of retinal and non-retinal characteristics: the physical placement of the pieces, says Tom Hackney, represents the thought-space shared between opponents. That lies behind paintings which convert the moves from Duchamp’s games into visual form, so undermining the great prankster’s self-proclaimed switch from art to chess by turning his chess back into art. Hackney paints, in sequence, the path of each move, so that where some linen squares remain unpainted as they were not on any such path, others build up multiple layers to semi-sculptural effect. They are not always black and white: the Fleisher game applies an idea of Duchamp’s for a set in which different pieces had different colours. Result: a clever way to arrive at abstract forms while outsourcing the decisions required. Duchamp would have liked that.

 

Habib Hajallie

                       

Rosalind Franklin, 2024

Habib Hajallie creates ballpoint pen drawings that look to champion – from the perspective of his Sierra Leonean and Lebanese heritage - figures from ethnically diverse backgrounds that have conspicuously been omitted from traditional British portraiture. Here his focus is slightly different: Rosalind Franklin (1920-58) was a pioneering female scientist at a time when that was not widely expected: the background text makes the comparison with the tale of how a rooster was put on trial in 15th century Basel in for ‘the heinous and unnatural crime of laying an egg’.

 

Berthram Hall

 


Gamete, 2022                (+1)

It is no surprise that Berthram Hall - furniture maker by day, sculptor by night – works masterfully with wood. ‘Gamete’ - portraying a sperm on one side, and an embryonic egg on the other - dances its form into life. The space where those male and female gametes meet is left empty with possibility. Hall’s parents arrived here from Ireland and the Caribbean, and he sees ‘Passing Through’ as representing the migratory journeys preceding the moment of his own conception – as well as how we all pass through ‘sliding doors’ moments, the possibilities that determine the direction of our lives. 

 

Roxana Halls




Laughing Head XIII, 2023            (+1)

Observing how often women subconsciously exercise self-surveillance, so deeply is female self-control embedded into cultural expectations, Roxana Halls likes to depict women enjoying behaving ‘badly’. That includes them laughing in situations where you wouldn’t expect it: eating, climbing, after a plane crash… She cites writer Hélène Cixous and her reading of the story of the Chinese general Sun Tse, who decapitated a group of women he was trying to train as soldiers, so disconcerted was he by the persistent laughter with which they responded to his orders. Here the laughter is presented plain, but with a further subversion of expectations in the rather radical lipstick.

  

Roland Hicks



Shady Three-Bit, 2023             (+1)

In recent years Roland Hicks has used gouache, paper and coloured pencil to refashion and scrupulously reproduce the texture of plywood and Oriented Strand Board (OSB), so that first we are deceived, and then surprised by such an investment of time and effort in  what look like discarded offcuts. He sees them as ‘trompe l’oeil still life paintings of fictional artworks’. It’s only at the level of finely graduated detail that we can tell what has been done. Here Hicks seems to be presenting found objects as if they were still life paintings - in the manner of, say, Daniel Spoerri - when actually the objects are themselves the painting. Hicks is interested, he says, in the question of ‘at what point something starts to look like an artwork, and what is deliberate and what accidental in that’.

Rosalind Hobley

                          

Dahlia IX, 2024

Rosalind Hobley describes herself as ‘an artist making prints inspired by sculptural forms’, and that’s exactly what she delivers rather beautifully through a modern twist on one of the earliest photographic methods, the cyanotype. Hobley works photographically with a camera and photographic lighting to make a large format negative that brings out the form of the flowers. This is placed on paper coated with a solution of iron salts, exposed to light, and then washed with water.  The darker parts of the image turn a deep Prussian blue. It’s a nice update to the most famous cyanotypes in art history: the plants captured so graphically by Anna Atkins in the 1840’s.

 

Rebecca Holton


Not just Rebecca Holton with 'Stephanie's Back', but my wife, Stephanie!

                                  

Stephanie’s Back, 2024

Rebecca Holton is a classically-trained realist painter who concentrates on observational figurative work and portraits, with a flourishing commission practice. She also makes sensitive nude studies, usually from life, but in this case from a photographic source. The title ‘Stephanie’s Back’ drew me in a little more, as my wife is also a Stephanie – though this is Holton’s interpretation of an image of a professional model you can find on Instagram @stephanie_herself.

 

 Jeremy Hutchison

Still from Dead White Man, 2024        (+1)

Jeremy Hutchison’s short film reverses the troubling second-hand supply chain that sees some 24bn charity-gifted garments shipped abroad annually, most to Africa. 40% end up on mountains of landfill - in Ghana, they are known as ‘obroni wawu’, Dead White Men’s Clothes. Hutchison, wearing sculptures made from second-hand clothes sourced in West Africa, becomes a spectre of waste colonialism as he wanders Dakar. Shipped back to the United Kingdom, he then haunts the shopping malls, textile recycling plants and corporate HQs of fast fashion brands. In the process, he performs his own entanglement with the network of processes that sustain the second-hand clothing industry, contesting its claims to charity and sustainability, presenting it instead as a form of zombie imperialism. This impactful film is shown with a totem-like sculpture made from the same material: a miniature effigy of the Dead White Man.


Phil Illingworth






 Psychophant V, 2022           (+3)

‘I don’t mind if they make people smile’, says Phil Illingworth of his paintings, ‘but I don’t want them to look comical’. Hang on, you might say, are they paintings? True, there’s no canvas involved, and not a lot of paint. Yet Illingworth’s concerns are painterly – indeed, he is on the committee of the artist group ‘Contemporary British Painting’. Yet he likes to explore the language of painting in a wittily experimental and three dimensional way. ‘Psychophant V’ is the most extreme example. It looks somewhat like a rack to hang things on, even as its own hanging is a prominent feature. It does, though, nod to the history, from Seurat to Hirst, of using coloured dots in painting. The title – a made-up word, I assume – suggests a sycophant who is manically keen to please – perhaps Illingworth is poking fun at his own choice of attractive colours. A ‘Gnossienne’ – he does like a playful title – is a freeform piano composition by Erik Satie. That suggests that we might read those squiggles of paint as musical notation on a score – though followers of recent painting will also be reminded of Jonathan Lasker. We’re drawn into speculation, but these works are essentially abstract, as well as essentially paintings. They are, you might say, signs that do not signify.

 

Louise Ørsted Jensen

                        

Pretender 2, 2024            (+1)

UK-based Danish artist Louise Ørsted Jensen works across performance, video and installation - as well as painting - to engage with notions of transgression, piracy and surveillance, and confesses a deep fascination with explosions. That makes this a comparatively quiet pair of works, any explosions being limited to the musical type implied. And even those are wittily silenced: the drummer has the dramatic pose and flailing hair off pat – but does seem to lack the drums…

 

Liane Lang

  

Circle Stone, 2024             (+3)

Sculpture meets photography in the work of Liane Lang.  Here she shows prints made onto agate and onyx – typical of her way of using materials with their own distinct chronologies to enact the experience of engaging with the historically layered landscapes, with how what’s visible now evokes multiple pasts. 15m years old would be young by the standards of agate. And from what time do the figures evoked come? Lang complicates that question by sometimes using wax models for her photographs. We end up, as one title has it, in a ‘Deep Time Dip’ that speaks to the comparative fleetingness of human life on earth, and how soon - by agate’s timescale – we have made our future problematic. And where do such thoughts about time occur? In the present, in the personal time of viewers, in the future memory of their experiences. When we look at Lang’s work we are in time – where else can we live? – thinking about ourselves in time.

 

Yeside Linney



Regeneration, 2024

We’re all familiar with the sculptural portrait bust, and with the painted portrait. But why paint a portrait of a sculptural bust? The answer lies in the subtly vegetal details of the face’s features: this is a head as if planted separately in soil. Why so? The title is ‘Regeneration’, and Yeside Linney says: ‘I often use nature as the connection with my Nigerian past’. Say 'Ye-see-dee', by the way. An African heritage takes fresh root in British soil. Linney explains that she is addressing her ‘double consciousness’ (Du Bois’ term for the struggle of Africans to remain true to black culture while faced by the demands of a predominantly white society, such that they ‘feel their two-ness’). She also points out that the classical portrait bust was rarely used to depict women, let alone black women; and that the hair as grass in ‘protective’ Bantu knots refers both to the lawn’s history as a status symbol for the elite, and to how natural Afro hair has often been perceived negatively.


Dongqi Luo

Tangled, 2024  

Dongqi Luo is a weaver who recently graduated in textile design at the University of Creative Arts. ‘Tangled’ is a silk yarn construction which, for all the complex interpenetration of threads, has enough discipline to make the title somewhat ironic. And it references abstract painting in a style that makes it a nice complement to Christina Niederberger’s work.

 

Christopher Madden

 

Overthrowing the Oppressor, 2023

I’m not surprised that ‘Overthrowing the Oppressor’ was made by an artist who is also a cartoonist. Yet, as Christopher Madden himself says, it isn’t so simple. Were the nails hammered in by another hammer? In that case the nails are not a metaphor for the oppressed rising up against their oppressor, but are more like the followers of another power (another hammer?) that may turn out to be as oppressive as the hammer that they’ve empaled. And it has art chops, calling to mind Man Ray’s iron with nails (‘The Gift’, 1921), Yoko Ono’s ‘Painting to Hammer a Nail’, 1961, and the whole nail-driven oeuvre of Gunther Uecker, not to mention African fetishes. 

 

Joanne Makin

   

Selfie, 2024

The twist in ‘Selfie’ is that it isn’t a selfie, but a painting of the artist – I assume – makin’ a selfie. That suggests that someone else took a photograph – also a non-selfie, then – from which Joanne Makin made her attractively blurred image. And that effect makes us wonder if it’s a painterly decision, or reflects badly on the technical ability of the photographer of the source image…

 

Henrietta McPhee

 


Tuk Tuk, 2024

Henrietta McPhee makes ‘ceramic paintings’ as part of a wider practise, centred in clay.  She likes to play between 2D and 3D, and I imagine there’s a related appeal to the tuk tuk, a three-wheeled rickshaw-vehicle that doesn’t quite come down on the side of bicycle or van. This one, in a joyous extra absurdity, seems to be filled with balloons to the exclusion of any space for the driver.

 

Nadège Mériau



April (Cropped Series), 2021           (+3)

London-based French artist Nadège Mériau shows three images from her lockdown series ‘Cropped’. We see her hands holding vegetables. Careful examination reveals that these are not photographs but scans, in the course of which Mériau has moved the vegetables to provoke analogue distortions which add a painterly touch, while reading as digital glitches - and also suggesting the presence of water. The frame of the scanner acts as the limit, cropping the crops. Mériau grew the food herself, and consumed it twice – first through a bodily performance and then putting it into her body. ‘Cropped’ foregrounds caring, but there is also an almost religious treatment of radishes and potatoes as improbable icons. Mériau complements that with a new film. ‘Slow Rushes’ refers playfully to film rushes — raw, unedited footage — and the ironic contrast of filming snails during rush hour. She explains that ‘while hurrying to work, I suddenly noticed snails crawling across the pavement, and found myself having to slow down to avoid stepping on them. I crouched down to observe them more closely and became mesmerized by their deliberate, unhurried journeys. Needless to say, I was late for work!’ 


Christina Niederberger


 Anges' Hanky, 2024                    (+3)

These paintings, looking more woven or stitched, fit into London-based Swiss artist Christina Niederberger’s long-running practise of effecting an affectionate critique of modernist masters by deriving illusory textiles from them. She identifies three drivers for that. First, the public-facing, masculine, gestural tradition of heroic modernism is brought into the feminine and domestic sphere. Second, the traditional hierarchies of art and craft are collapsed onto the same plane. Third: given the digital world’s surfeit of images, she’d rather recycle modernism into a contemporary context than add to the post-modern excess. Those levels of interpretation come together seamlessly to yield a painterly abstraction that wittily builds a fresh language out of not-uncritical nostalgia: she has lovingly stitched up Picasso and de Kooning: here, Bauhaus and cubist languages are presented together with a step into the female zone, through a tribute to Agnes Martin.

 

Rossanne Pellegrino

 

Cool Rider, 2018

This is from Rossanne Pellegrino’s ‘Strange New world’ series, in which the Adelaide-born artist, now based in St Leonards-on-Sea, documents and embroiders on her Australian family background by altering old photographs. The cool rider is her uncle, given a suitably hippy aura by his niece’s additions, which also suggest the rush of a bike oncoming at speed.

 

Brian Prangle

 

Perfect Drying Day, 2023

I liked two works in which the titles suggest that the quotidian act of drying the washing is the main subject, yet it isn’t. Birmingham-based Brian Prangle says he uses soft pastels for the primal feeling of applying and mixing pigment with his fingers directly onto a surface. In ‘Perfect Drying Day’ that’s in the service of a composition, made from a snapshot in Spain, in which the sheet being hung out keys us in to the primary geometry of the buildings surrounding it.

 

Sarah Purvey

 

Fractured, 2023

What is fractured in ‘Fractured’, Sarah Purvey’s tactile intersection of drawing and sculpture? Not, I’d say, the clay, which is punctured but unbroken. It could be the expectation of functionality; or it might be meaning - the fractured language of holes eludes us. Purvey says the piece ‘serves as a witness to the gradual hollowing of an individual living with memory loss… a haptic map of the chaos associated with the disappearance of self.’

 

Daniel Rapley

 


Drift 130, 2024                (+3)

Daniel Rapley is interested in issues of authorship. A dozen years ago that took the extreme and rigorous form of copying out by hand the entire King James Bible. His newest body of work, ‘Drift’, has a more visual basis: Rapley has collected over 20,000 35mm slides spanning the 1930’s to 90’s, when the format began to disappear. He selects two, stacks them on top of each other, and photographs them on a light box in order to make a new print. He’s not too concerned with what the slides depict, making the process somewhat abstracted and decidedly painterly. Not surprisingly, he says that there are many failures before he finds the kind of tonal, chromatic and compositional coherence he is looking for within the complex and sometimes ambiguous layering. The resulting visual allure may be the main thing, but contingent issues arise: the nature of time (relevant to which he is collaborating with the philosopher of time Kerry Langsdale), memory, and transparency.

 

Alison Rees

 

In Between the Lines III, 2024             (+2)

‘In Between the Lines’ III, IV and V are each comprised of four elements. Alison Rees describes herself as using ‘porcelain, thinly rolled, to create a strong, yet fragile looking, minimal form’.  You might call them ceramic paintings. Rees also thinks of books: they ‘draw upon the language of the paper page – its repeatable dimensions, thinness, use of borders and grid layout – to tell abstract stories in clay.  The stories I tell are of person and of place, of the ordinary and the everyday, and of nimbleness and agility within a sometimes weighty world… I am interested in abstracting information from my environment and, through colour, repetition and variation, making something new from it… Through this deliberate reduction in volume and process, a minimal three-dimensional object emerges which contains layers of meaning without material weight.’ We can see these, then, as buildings reduced to their geometric essence, nodding to hard-edged minimal painting while using pleasing colours and the appeal of ceramic to foreground pleasure over severity.Then there’s the echo of alphabets and Pacman. And that’s all before we get to their actual basis: water drainage grills!

 

Louise Rieger

 

Good Drying Weather, 2023

I liked two works in which the titles suggest that the quotidian act of drying the washing is the main subject, yet it isn’t. Louise Rieger’s ‘Good Drying Weather’ is being enjoyed by a tricyclist who rather cutely grabs our attention. It makes sense both that that the Kentish artist has had a career in children’s TV, and that she uses 1970’s Polaroids as a source.

 

DJ Roberts

 

Building, 2024                 (+ 5)

DJ Roberts’ wide-ranging practise incudes highly detailed graphite drawings in which the small scale and the time evidently invested combine to generate an intimate engagement with the typically nostalgic inflection of his subjects. As he explains of this set: ‘I grew up on a series of RAF bases, and the look of such places - concrete blockhouses, tarmac, structures whose purpose seems unclear -  fascinates me and is a recurring theme in my work. Ugly though these places are, as a kid I found them tremendously exciting. Planes would be taking off at night, you’d see pilots coming out of the mess in all their gear. And of course there was the travel - I was at boarding school and from one holiday to the next I never knew where I might be going. Riffling through a magazine the other day I came across a photo of one of the bases on which dad had served. It got me started on this series of drawings, which concentrate chiefly on his postings abroad. The titles are deliberately nondescript; there is something anonymous and uniform about a military base, and you never know quite what goes on inside the buildings around you. But the images bring back strong memories, and this sort of environment always gives me the agreeable sense that something might be going to happen - that there is the possibility of action!’

  

Fiona G Roberts

 


Untitled 133, 2024            (+3)

Fiona Roberts loves to explore different combinations of paint and ground: here she sticks to oil but on acrylic glass, aluminium and paper – it’s worth checking what differences the surfaces make. In all cases, the mark making treads a dynamic line between what we see as abstract – perhaps accidental – and what we see as representational. We might take that to parallel the difference between the outward appearance we can seem and the inner thoughts we cannot - for where Roberts varies less is in subject matter. The female head predominates. I read that as a feminist choice: she foregrounds female agency, and has sometimes dealt with explicit back stories, depicting - in her non-literal manner - women murdered by their partners, women who can paint as a counter to contrary patriarchal claims, her mother as a representative of generations of women denied opportunities. Yet the nature of that emotional engagement remains ambiguous from picture to picture. Where some sense vulnerability, other might see thoughtfulness: what matters to Roberts is that emotional readings are available, and that we arrive at them through painterly effects.

 

Sara Rossberg

 


Combination, 2024

Sara Rossberg is a German painter who studied at the Städelschule, Academy of Fine Art, Frankfurt before coming to England on a scholarship in 1976 – and staying. She takes hundreds of street photographs of others, as well as turning the lens on herself, as the starting point for markedly material paintings: she prints the images in black and white, the better to generate her often virulent colour choices without restraint. Rossberg’s aim is to ‘explore humanness in a broader sense’ – not setting out narratives, nor representing particular individuals, but creating an object that conveys a feeling of intensity through a physical presence that uses just acrylic mediums and pigment, repeatedly layered and scraped away.

 

Simon Taylor


 

Baked Wotsits 16.5g Pack 82 KCal, 2024

The normal convention for still life paintings is to show the items of value as you would come across them in the house. That won’t be regularly arranged across a white ground, but Lisa Milroy has established that as an alternative mode using such items as shoes, fruit and ceramic pots. The effect is to animate items in their own space. Simon Taylor gives that a humorous and absurd tweak by choosing cheaply cheerful Wotsits as his subject.

    

Alice Walter

 


Game Boy Forager
, 2024

To visit Alice Walter’s small seaside studio in St Leonards is to tread on scraps of sawn plywood and pick your way through frayed odds and ends of previously used canvases and curios that have washed up there. All are integral to how she builds up her endearingly ramshackle visions of landscapes-come-interiors-come-video-games. They start out abstractly – until the textures and colours suggest some sort of figuration.  Walter goes with that, adding in some recurring tropes, such as a ‘blockhead’ that might be a self-portrait of sorts – she likes ‘the idea of the cartoon bringing things down to earth in a humorous way’. Out of all that something of the medieval, the folksy and the surreal coheres in a peculiarly Walterish way, topped off by riddling titles.

 

 

 



















 

 

 

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