Kevin Francis Gray
Pace Gallery, London
Through March 27, 2021
© Kevin Francis Gray, courtesy Pace Gallery
At the core of KEVIN FRANCIS GRAY’s practice is an interrogation of the intersection of traditional sculptural techniques and contemporary life. Rather than working towards classical ideals of beauty, Gray relies on textural surfaces as opposed to facial or bodily expressions to imbue his sculptures with psychological realism. Furthering Kevin Francis Gray’s decade of working with marble, this new work pushes the possibilities of the artist’s sculptural practice into new territories of physical and psychological expression. These works are intimately linked to a period of intense self-reflection in the artist’s life, which imbues them with a sense of both serenity and fragility.
This exhibition showcases a shift in Kevin Francis Gray’s techniques and modes of representation as he moves from creating figures in highly polished finishes to those with rough-hewn surfaces. On display for the first time, Kevin Francis Gray’s latest series, the Breakdown Works, introduce a wide variety of new materials into his sculptural praxis—green onyx, bronze, rough concrete, steel and ebonised wood come into play with marble. In balancing several colours, textures and shapes within a single composition, Kevin Francis Gray eschews the distinction between sculpture and plinth to create a unified entity. Envisaged to interact with one another within the space, the Breakdown Works serve as the framework of this exhibition, creating formal resonances between themselves and the larger sculptures. Drawing on the energy and block forms of Futurist sculptors, each unique piece sits atop its own custom pedestal and indicates a different moment in the evolution of Kevin Francis Gray’s practice.
Many of the materials used to create the sculptures in this exhibition were salvaged or repurposed by Kevin Francis Gray. Forgotten tree trunks from Cambridgeshire and decades-old waylaid marble blocks were brought to the artist’s London studio, where he set to work uncovering their potential. In Kevin Francis Gray’s Moondancer, a totemic marble form sits atop an ancient elm burl which itself becomes an intrinsic part of the work’s potency. The wood grounds the marble in nature, providing a contrast between the two elements that resonates throughout the space.
In pieces such as Moon Dancer Standing (2020) and Sun Worshipper Standing (2020), the characters are heightened to celestial bodies, echoing modern spirituality and Pagan traditions with literal representations of the sun and the moon.
Indeed, in these new iterations of Gray’s long-terms Gods series, his figures are now young, anonymous, and notably more elaborate, as with Striding Youth (2020). Paired with the Breakdown Works, these characters present traits brimming with vulnerability and strength, anger and hope, dedication and combativeness. The viewer is in turn faced with this complexity, as they bear witness to the raw materials and their sculptural transformations.
KEVIN FRANCIS GRAY (b. 1972, South Armagh, Northern Ireland) addresses the complex relationships between abstraction, figuration and portraiture through sculpture. Crafting human figures in varied scales that align with classical styles of representation, his work treads the boundary between contemporary society and classical history, reverberating with the aesthetics of Neoclassicism. His work has been included in exhibitions at the Royal Academy, London, UK; Sudeley Castle, Winchcombe, Gloucestershire, UK; Museum of Contemporary Art of the Val de-Marne, Paris, France; Nieuw Dakota, Amsterdam; Palazzo Arti Napoli, Naples, Italy; Musee d’art Moderne, Saint-Etienne, France; ARTIUM, Centro-Museo Vasco de Arte Contemporáneo, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain; Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv, Israel; and Art Space, New York, USA.
PACE GALLERY
6 Burlington Gardens, London