Showing posts with label Caroline Walker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caroline Walker. Show all posts

04/12/24

Swimming - Exhibition Curated by Rusell Tovey @ Grimm Gallery, Amsterdam

Swimming 
Exhibition Curated by Rusell Tovey 
Grimm Gallery, Amsterdam 
28 November 2024 – 11 January 2025

Summer 2023 was an informative and transformative season.
Shifting and adjusting, water played a big role, protecting and guiding through many conflicted decisions and choices.
Water held.
I swam and I understood.
A lonely wet choreographed figure, dancing with the deep.
The big brilliant blue bore witness.
Cold, threatening, all consuming, yet calming and wise, lifted up into buoyancy.
To swim is to let go, weightless and free, small and insignificant in the knowledge that this is a motion older than time.
I like the idea that water has always and will always be there.
We return to water and we come from it.
Almost every cup we drink has at one moment almost definitely passed through a dinosaur.
Water is poetry and prose.
Water is old.

For millennia, artists have been guided by water, inspired, revealing itself in unending infinite possibilities.
Whether it be the physical act of cleansing, the sad shower, the long lingering bath, the party jacuzzi.
The refreshing lake jump, river crossing, plunge pool, pond and stream.
The wild Atlantic, The Pacific, The Indian, all converging, all inviting, open to our presence.

Wet trunks.
Hose pipe bans.
Taps, fountains, sprinklers.
Puddles. Swamps.
Hazy, foggy, steam.

Water is the quiet friend that makes a lot of noise.

Russell Tovey, 2024

GRIMM presents Swimming, a group exhibition curated by Russell Tovey, on view at the gallery’s Amsterdam location. The exhibition brings together a selection of works by Alvaro Barrington and Dorus Tossijn, Andrew Cranston, Carroll Dunham, Jake Grewal, Brook Hsu, Derek Jarman, Cheyenne Julien, Anne Rothenstein, Wolfgang Tillmans, Caroline Walker, Shaqúelle Whyte and Xie Lei. 

The curator Russell Tovey is an award-winning actor and podcaster. His podcast Talk Art has had over 10 million downloads and his first book, Talk Art: everything you wanted to know about contemporary art but were afraid to ask, co-written with his podcast partner Rob Diament, became a Sunday Times Bestseller. Their second book, Talk Art: The Interviews, was released in 2023. He has curated multiple exhibitions in and around the UK, Paris (FR) and New York, NY (US) and he is a patron, benefactor and ambassador for many institutions and museums.

Born in Venezuela to Grenadian and Haitian migrant workers, Alvaro Barrington (b. 1983, Caracas, VE) was raised between the Caribbean and Brooklyn, New York, by a network of relatives. An unwavering commitment to community informs his wideranging practice. His series Garvey examines the cultural exchanges of early 20th century London and the Harlem Renaissance – both sites of large-scale migration from the Caribbean at the height of Modernism – and their ongoing influence on artistic output and notions of self-hood, sexuality, the soul, identity, nurture, nationality, punishment and death. Considering himself primarily a painter, Barrington’s multimedia approach to image-making employs burlap, textiles, postcards and clothing, exploring how materials themselves can function as visual tools while referencing their personal, political and commercial histories. The work for this exhibition was made with long-term collaborator Dorus Tossijn (b. 1984, Amsterdam, NL). Tossijn is a London-based artist working in multiple media with a main focus on painting and drawing. In often small-scale works he explores the quick-paced current image-making culture through a slow painting process, questioning what we consider good and beautiful.

Andrew Cranston (b. 1969, Hawick, UK) is a painter-storyteller, a way of working that is enhanced by his often painting on the linen bound covers of old books. His stories coalesce in the process of making - the paintings emerging gradually through the manipulation of his materials: layering, lacquering, bleaching, collaging and constantly re- working his way into images that seem to shift backwards and forwards in time. He has described one of his works as ‘a painting that came out of my brush one day’, a statement that sums up his approach. They are resolutely contemporary in spirit and yet connected by a strong thread to painters of the past, especially perhaps to the intimism of Vuillard and Bonnard, or to Matisse or Munch.

Since the 1970s, Carroll Dunham (b. 1949, New Haven, CT, US) has developed a unique pictorial language in a significant oeuvre encompassing painting, drawing, print and sculpture. Employing a stylization of the human figure, Dunham’s work playfully and crudely examines painting tropes and traditions. With thick black outlines and simple imagery – a blue sky, green trees, and pink flesh – he employs cartoonish semblances of nature and sexually grotesque imagery as a foil for experimenting with color and line. Dunham’s take on painting is opposed to an authorial identity, and rather offers a complex integration of formal crafting and philosophical thought.

Jake Grewal (b. 1994, London, UK) transforms personal experiences into dreamlike scenes in natural landscapes in his paintings. Drawing on a Romanticism, Grewal portrays nude male figures through a queer gaze. Often employing a color palette of subdued greens and browns, the artist uses nature as a metaphor for his own internal landscape and personal musings.

Brook Hsu (b. 1987, Washington, DC, US) deploys and weaves the autobiographical and the mythopoetic into paintings using an array of materials, including ink, oil paint, industrial carpets, and off-cuts of ready-made lumber. The sources for Hsu’s imagery come from her own observations, sometimes arising from art history, film and literature. Working across painting, drawing, sculpture and writing, her works aim to question how we define representation today, producing abstract and figurative works that employ a host of signs and motifs, recounting stories of love, pain and humor.

Derek Jarman (1942-1994, Northwood, UK) was a leading avant-garde British filmmaker whose visually opulent and stylistically adventurous body of work stands defied the established literary and theatrical traditions of his national cinema. With influences ranging from the eccentric writing-directing team Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger to seminal gay aesthetes Jean Cocteau and Kenneth Anger, Derek Jarman advocated a personal cinema more dedicated to striking imagery and evocative sounds than to the imperatives of narrative and characterization.

Cheyenne Julien's (b. 1994, Bronx, NY, US) work delves into cultural and collective histories as seen through her personal experiences. Frequently rooted in memory, her paintings and drawings capture intimate subjects drawn from her closest relationships and life in New York. Through portraits, landscapes, and still lifes, she emphasizes the interconnectedness of people and their environments, paying particular attention to the architectural backdrops and everyday objects that shape daily life. While grounded in the more challenging aspects of reality, Cheyenne Julien's work also carries a humorous touch, illuminating how built environments can influence racial perceptions.

In Xie Lei’s (b. 1983, Huainan, CN) paintings, animals and plants are personified, while human characters are intimately incorporated in their surroundings. While these environments are depicted by conventional signs, Xie Lei often eschews delineating ground from sky, and foreground from background, disseminating a sense of ethereality into paintings that look no more like windows into a new world but as symbolist talismans facing the viewer. Xie Lei's canvases are like infernos, foreign substances that ceaselessly consume themselves and deliver themselves entirely to us. Each representation is a culmination, a moment chosen because it is the most intense.

Anne Rothenstein’s (b. 1949, Essex, UK) enigmatic paintings are frequently characterised by a dreamlike quality. Mysterious figures often populate her flattened landscapes and interiors.The artist draws inspiration from found imagery, personal experience and memory, working instinctively to communicate atmosphere and psychological tension. Rothenstein’s scenes are rendered with sinuous lines and a distinctive palette built up of thin washes of oil. Often painting directly on wood panel, the artist allows grain to blend with figure and landscape.

Wolfgang Tillmans (b. 1968, Remscheid, DE) is an influential contemporary German photographer whose work is in dialogue with artists such as Andreas Gursky and Gerhard Richter. Emerging in the 1990s with his snapshots of teenagers, clubs, and LGBTQ culture, Tillmans' practice has expanded to include diaristic photography, large-scale abstraction, and commissioned magazine work. Capturing landscapes from an airplane window, still lifes of crustaceans, or straightforward portraits, his work conveys the profundity of an encyclopedic archive.

Caroline Walker’s (b. 1982, Dunfermline, UK) large canvases and intimate panels depict anonymous women in settings that blur the boundaries between public and private. Walker’s paintings are a lens for the everyday lives of women, and her portraits of diverse subjects tell their story through the spaces they inhabit. In her recent artworks, Caroline Walker turns her focus to her immediate surroundings. She explores the boundary between being an observer – that is preserving the “objective” eye of an outsider – and magnifying the experience of a place which has become part of the fabric of her life. They are conceived as a reflection on community and how the anonymous people we encounter become characters in our own stories.

Shaqúelle Whyte (b. 2000, Wolverhampton, UK) imagines fictional environments in his paintings, creating an enigmatic atmosphere that contributes to his psychoanalytic approach. The painted medium is paramount for the artist whose broad, loosely rendered brushstrokes are mirrored in his expansive compositions, in which time and space expand and contract across the canvas. Although non-linear, narrative plays a central role in Whyte’s work, which sees him carry certain motifs over from one painting to the next. These recurring details contribute to the sense of theatre that pervades his work; Whyte directs his subjects as though they are actors and his canvas a stage.

GRIMM AMSTERDAM
Keizersgracht 241, 1016EA Amsterdam

21/02/24

Still Life Exhibition @ The Hepworth Wakefield - "Still Lives"

Still Lives 
The Hepworth Wakefield 
1 March 2024 – January 2025

Bernard Meninsky
Bernard Meninsky 
Lilies, 1917

Rene Matić
Rene Matić 
Southbank Centre Dressing Room II, London, 2023 
Courtesy of The Artist and Arcadia Missa, London 
Photo: Nathan Vidler

Nicolaes van Verendael
Nicolaes van Verendael 
Still Life with a Lobster, 1678

The Hepworth Wakefield presents an exhibition focusing on the theme of still life. Still Lives will display more than 70 works by over 50 artists across two galleries, illustrating the enduring nature of the still life genre throughout different epochs in art history, including post-impressionism, British modernism, surrealism and contemporary art. The exhibition reflects upon the enduring inspiration artists have found in everyday objects, from an interest in colour and form, to a desire to capture their impermanence. While still life is traditionally associated with painting, the exhibition will feature works from a range of artistic mediums including sculpture, photography, ceramics, painting and works-on-paper.

Still Lives will display three of the oldest artworks in Wakefield’s art collection by renowned Dutch masters – Jacob Foppens van Es, Willem Ormea and Nicolaes van Verendael – that date back to the seventeenth century, highlighting the emergence of still life painting in the Netherlands. These will be presented in dialogue with contemporary artworks, proposing unlikely conversations.

Anthea Hamilton
Anthea Hamilton
Melon, 2017

Caroline Walker
Caroline Walker 
Noor, 3.30pm, Leyton, 2017 
© Caroline Walker. Courtesy the artist; 
Stephen Friedman Gallery, London; 
GRIMM Gallery and Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh. 
Photo: Peter Mallet

Veronica Ryan
Veronica Ryan
 
Sweet Dreams are Made of These, 2021 
Photo: George Baggaley

Pivotal additions to Wakefield’s art collection during the initial decades of the twentieth century by artists such as Roger Fry, Ivon Hitchens, Frances Hodgkins, Anne Estelle Rice and Geer Van Velde will show how, through the deconstruction and distortion of familiar objects, these artists contributed to significant debates in modern art. Some works in the exhibition look beyond objects, exploring the idea of stillness within domestic settings. Artists such as Vanessa Bell, John Collier, Patrick Heron, Mabel Layng and Walter Sickert capture the silence and tranquillity inherent in interior spaces, while providing intimate glimpses into their environments. Still Lives will also include several recent artworks that have been generously donated to Wakefield’s art collection in the last year. Noor, 3:30pm, Leyton, 2017, a large-scale oil painting by Caroline Walker and three photographs from Rene Matić’s a girl for the living room, 2023 series will go on public display for the first time since their acquisition. Contemporary sculptures by Steve Claydon, Anthea Hamilton, Eva Rothschild and Veronica Ryan present incongruous arrangements of familiar objects, creating scenes that hover between the strangely ordinary and the extraordinary.
Marie-Charlotte Carrier, Curator at The Hepworth Wakefield said: ‘This thematic exhibition is timed to coincide with Wakefield’s ‘Our Year’ celebration of culture across the district throughout 2024. It showcases the breadth of Wakefield’s art collection, which was established a century ago in 1923 and continues to be developed by The Hepworth Wakefield today as a rich resource for Wakefield residents and visitors alike. While artists have been drawn to still life across the centuries, the genre has often been disregarded or considered less important in the history of art. Still Lives is a wonderful opportunity to show historic works that haven’t been displayed at The Hepworth Wakefield for a long time alongside new acquisitions that have joined the collection recently through the generosity of donors.’
THE HEPWORTH WAKEFIELD
Gallery Walk, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, WF1 5AW