We would like to invite you to our Closing Event that will celebrate the culmination of our well received first three-month run funded by the Outer London Fund.
Construction Gallery
Sculpture Show
Wed 21 – Sun 25 March, 12 – 7 daily
Closing Event: Saturday 24 March 2012
6.30pm to 9.30pm
74 – 80 Upper Tooting Road, London SW17 7PB
Bram Thomas Arnold, Helen Barff, Nadia Berri, Sarah Bowker-Jones, Amy Cochrane, Alice Cunningham, Dexter Dymoke, Anna Flemming, Catalina Garces de los Rios, Jonathan Gildersleeves, Kate Lepper, Fiona Long, Jera May, Fleur Melbourn, Joanna Mires, Emer O’Brien, Marianna O’Reilly, PsychoanalYSL, Sam Zealey.
Sculpture is the theme of our final exhibition and each space within Construction Gallery has been opened to a provocative set of juxtapositions.
With a multitude of materials, methods and motives the selected participants provide insight into contemporary sculpture.
From tongue-in-cheek inventions to surreal forms that suspend disbelief; from carefully balanced compositions to the sinister implications of obsessive design; from craft as a means to remember to craft as a means to forget; various concerns are introduced in a collision of intuitive and analytical means with which ideas and their forms can be celebrated
Our final exhibition takes a fun humorous approach to sculpture, bringing cutting edge art into this unconventional gallery space and reflecting the wider interests at the core of the POST artist group’s ethos.
|
| Bram Thomas Arnold works with simple and subtle imagery, that often have melancholic or Romantic overtones to them. “I work with explanations of experience, or attempts at such, idiosyncratic ways of looking at perception that seek to open up in the viewer the realisation that all perception is idiosyncratic; that I have never seen anything you have, and you have never seen anything I have.” |
|
 |
|
The Materials and processes Helen Barff uses contradict and disrupt expected perceptions – hard, cold materials look soft and warm. Heavy pieces or objects look weightless. Objects turned upside-down disturb perceptions of gravity. Things turned inside out create a dichotomy between presence and absence. The work suggests the uncanny, yet invites a tactile interaction.
|
|
|
 |
|
Nadia Berri’s practice investigates the interrelationship between imagination, reality and perception.
‘Ladder without steps’ is a sculpture that transforms a figure of speech into a physical object. In the figure of speech a concrete image is used to describe something less tangible – in this case the idea of impossibility. Nadia Berri is interested to see what happens when this concrete image, only ever existing in the mind, becomes actual reality.
|
|
 |
|
Sarah Bowker-Jones‘ ribbon paintings, created specifically for the Construction Gallery windows during a project residency are made using plastic curling ribbon, polythene, acrylic paint, PVA, dirt and heat.
|
|
 |
|
Amy Cochrane utilises imagery from Greek and Egyptian art – restoring white marble sculptures with the colours they once wore. This conflict with our modern sensibility for clean white classical sculptures raises questions regarding taste and the kitsch. She uses common representations of these archetypal forms to restore some kind of mystique akin to the original.
|
|
 |
|
Through an understanding of materiality and form Alice Cunningham seeks to evoke a pure individual perception on a very base, instinctive level; to try and speak through materials.
Her recent work is concerned with highlighting natural process as a mirror to describe the cogs of our existence in a greater sense and hint at the artificial complexities of our modern world
|
|
 |
|
Referring losely to A E Houseman’s poetry, Dexter Dymoke‘s sculpture, “Lost Content” uses found objects and materials in a nostalgic manner that makes them seem like symbols retrieved from the past.
“Focusing on that which is forgotten, ignored or taken for granted, my process is an improvisation of a story, the resolution of which remains bracingly elusive.”
|
|
 |
|
| The practice of giving present value to past objects is the main focus of Anna Flemming‘s current work. Through a selective accumulation of material she studies the cultural and social ramifications of using a nostalgic method of production. Primarily working with the bizarre and kitsch aesthetic of dated decorative objects, she aims to investigate the fragmented nature of presenting the past through contemporary culture. |
|
 |
|
|
Catalina Garces de los Rios
|
|
Catalina Garces de los Rios’ light box with view master attached to the front, explores cultural dislocation. The slides narrate a world of slapstick scenes performed by the artist, whilst the viewer is invited to listen to the sound of a voice struggling to recite the British national anthem.
|
|
 |
|
Jonathan Gildersleeves artwork explores the relationship between drawing and sculpture. He produce 3D objects through an intuitive, playful process, similar to that of doodling or sketching.
|
|
 |
|
Kate Lepper‘s practice deals with human relationships with nature and the nature/culture academic paradigm. The aesthetic is intentionally easy, drawing on toys, furniture, clothing and utensils. Often involving vegetables, plants or animal remnants and plastic, pseudo-functional objects and installations attribute emotional experience to the inanimate, and suggest unlikely uses for the useless.
|
|
 |
|
Fiona Long’s practice explores the way in which the banal and everyday can be humorously elevated through laborious scrutiny. Her site responsive work examines the environment and recapitulates it in a subtly absurd way. Her sculptures playfully challenge our expectations of the urban environment. With attention, the most ordinary details can become exquisite observations.
|
|
 |
|
Jera May replaces Constable’s foreboding sky with an invading ocean presenting an inescapable peril for this heartening pastoral scene. The title of the work, Lagoon, is taken from ‘The Drowned World’ by JG Ballard, a science fiction writer of 20th century apocalyptic literature who predicts another kind of landscape which occurs when temperatures increase, ice caps melt and the inevitable rise of the sea.
|
|
 |
|
‘Fleur Melbourn‘s ‘The Enemy’ is an archival project on the second phase of the Third Reich’s ‘Wonderweapons’ at the end of WWII and Hitler’s quasi Sci-fi ambitions. Upon their victory, the allied forces implemented ‘Operation Paperclip,’ a controversial “bleaching” of the ‘menace to security’ status of Nazi Scientists, in order to commandeer their technological developments for the sake of US space exploration.
|
|
|
 |
|
Joanna Mires’ work aims to elevate the discarded; a fascination with second hand objects and “the idea that something hs a life before my experience of it”.
The ornaments shown as part of ‘Occur’ have been re-cast from curiously shaped Avon perfume bottles made in the early 1970’s. Through the creation of a mould these functional scent holders are given new life as pure white ceramics. By removing the colour, transparency and function of the original form only the memory of the shape remains.
|
|
 |
|
Marianna O’Reilly‘s ‘28’ is a humorous narrative focusing on the mouth as a tool for expression and teeth as instruments for possible aggression, questioning its strength of bite as well as breaking down and assimilating knowledge as metaphorical food.
|
|
 |
|
PsychoanalYSL (Joey Holder, Benjamin Orlow and Christopher Thomas) present a 3D simulation of ‘The Solution’, an environmental super-sculpture that contains experimental environmental technologies developed by physicists investigating ‘dark flow’. ‘The Solution’ comprises a computer powered by a neon liquid that generates a light fog. When breathed in by visitors who then take the ‘air’ out into the world, this purifying fog will clean the sky and thereby save the planet.
|
|
 |
|
Sam Zealey‘s practice attempts to make an uncommon experience common in a controlled situation by constructing ‘Potential Energy Sculptures’ that perform microcosms of our universe. He takes on the role of an artist, scientist and engineer, translating the ordinary into the impossible, recreating scientific and celestial phenomena out of spinning tops, magnets, vacuum cleaners and running machines.
|
|
|
 |
|
|
Sculpture Show Closing Event!
Sat 24 March, 6.30 – 9.30
|
|
Join the Construction Gallery Team and the artists exhibting in Sculpture Show to celebrate the culmination of our glorious first three-month run and the closing of this exciting and high calibre group exhibition.
|
|
Emer O’Brien
Performance of ‘Barbara’
|
| Emer O’Brien has an enduring interest in the passage of time. Her work is a meditative combination of analogue photography, film and installation. She is best known for works that mediate on the redundancy of human artifacts when deserted by man or things; once known, now unfathomable in their mystery. |
|
|