Laura Bartlett

Drawn by Its Own Memory

21 Nov 2015 - 31 Jan 2016

Drawn by its own memory Installation view, Laura Bartlett Gallery, London, 2015
DRAWN BY ITS OWN MEMORY
Nina Canell, N. Dash, Simon Fujiwara, Lydia Gifford, Hayley Tompkins and Phillip Zach
21 November 2015 – 31 January 2016

Drawn by its own memory brings together a group of contemporary artists working in a variety of media whose work evidences an exploration with materials and materiality.

Through processes of their creation, structure, size or relation to the surrounding gallery architecture, the works presented are imbued with a sense of physicality, tactility of surface, the remnant workings of human hands or impressions of the body. For other works included it is an absence of formal logic within the object that is key. Drawing upon the subtlety of fluctuating forces, the minutiae of perception and the innate relationship we have with material, works transfer, exchange and share forms of intuitive knowledge, becoming a filter or conduit through the artists transferal of labour, energy and experience.

Nina Canell considers sculpture as a medium of storage, transmission and reception, often producing a kind of material displacement or exchange. She has a specific interest for the in-between, micro-phenomena, and the imperceptibly palpable. Presented here Free-Space Path Loss, 2014, a simple discretely suspended copper frame illuminates with the remnant iridescent fingerprints of the materials previous encounters, revealed through a process of heat-treating the material. The title, a seemingly contradictory, yet industry used term that describes a tele-communicational equation that, according to Canell “refers to a kind of thinning or dispersal of a signal when traveling in ‘free space’ (such as air).”

Residues of energy, heat and human contact is also the subject of the densely packed, copper wire and rubber insulated telephone cable Brief Syllable (Flat), 2015, an enquiry into the potential that memory can be carried or stored within the materiality of an object. This unearthed subterranean cable, here lies bisected and redundant above ground on an upturned section of carpet. Often unseen, embedded in our walls and city streets, curator Chris Sharp writes of these works; “their invisibility is compounded by a certain unthinkability in a digital, so-called wireless paradigm, as if they were improbable anachronisms. But their actuality is real; they subcutaneously populate our cities like skeins of artificial nerves, permitting one part of the body of a city to communicate with another.”[1]

Presented here is a photograph, a silver gelatin print by N. Dash that depicts an image of one of her constructions, a fabric sculpture made of small swatches of factory-made cotton cloth. The material has been worked through the artist’s daily touch, rubbing and handling; over time the cloth becomes worn, dirty and threadbare. Once she has created a number these pieces, the formless sculptures are assembled in varied configurations and photographed. The material serves as a substitute recording device that documents perceptible information, oils and dirt and manifests the less quantitative, energy, through the artist’s touch.

This physical way of engaging with and navigating through the world is the starting point for Dash’s paintings. The paintings are made with a variety of materials; adobe, oil, graphite, pigment, acrylic, string and linen. The adobe is produced from earth gathered from New Mexico, where the artist first encountered the material. The earth is sifted and reconstituted as a variation on the traditional adobe plaster used in building construction. The two paintings presented here evoke the architectural proportions of constructed structures as well as the vastness of the land, both elements of the material world.

In Simon Fujiwara’s Fabulous Beasts series, post-war fur coats are gathered in Berlin where he lives and works. Initially sourced via online listings, and now acquired from antique dealers, these furs variously evidence the decadence and decline of a city through the revealing of production standards and techniques. In shaving and stretching the animal furs, the archaeology of their production, what was once hidden is revealed, the inked manufacturers quality standard stamps, as seen in Fabulous Beasts (Queens Premier Ocelot), 2015, blemishes and remnants of animal skin disease, the pattern cutters annotations and the complex stitched and seamed coat structure is seen and deconstructed in Fabulous Beasts (Blue Fox Saga), 2015.

In these works, Fujiwara completes the materials narrative from animal skin, to decadent seasonal protection worn by a generation of women, now fallen out of fashion, to passive observed object. Removed from political and social stigma, it is the materials authentic self which is now the focus, and the remaining markings of its former life and history. In their new state, the skins appear both primal and luxurious in an age where a deeper awareness of production and history is fetishised as much as the finished products themselves. Each skin is a token of a defunct idea of wealth; a reminder of the changing nature of taste, value, luxury and society.

Lydia Gifford’s practice is an ongoing investigation into the language and processes of painting. Focusing on its physicality, her work navigates a balance between painting and sculpture, where horizontal and vertical forms appear to emerge autonomously from the manifestation of assembled materials. Gifford’s work offers an experience of interrelated objects, consumed surfaces evidencing textural tension and physical nuances with their surrounding architecture. Privately performative, she works intuitively, guided by the structure of her materials.

Presented here is a large-scale horizontal diptych, Growth, 2015 which appears as a disrupted monochrome, the coloured fabric dye from one internal material used, tainting the outer from within. These various fabrics, saturated with paint and gesso are accumulated on a wooden skeletal structure, choreographed, contorted and fixed with nails, pushing the materials inherent integrity to the limit to a new, reorganised sense of order. Also included is the floor sculpture Vasal, 2015 – a horizontal wooden plank drawn to the ground by a focused mass of concrete saturated cloth, conflating interior with exterior. Half elevated, twisted, and rooted to the gallery floor, this work balances a tension of space and gravity through its structure and surface.

Hayley Tompkins discrete, intimate and deceptively simple assemblages are the result of an intense research and intuitive drive. Her diaristic works encompass ready-made found objects, personal photography as well as images sourced from stock photo catalogues. These materials are countered with a non-traditional painterly practice in which she has painted various objects including hammers, chairs, twigs and knives, to cut up segments of clothing. Generally small in scale, these works are intensely worked upon and require close investigation on behalf of the objects participant.

Playing with the proportion and juxtaposition of her works, presented here are three works Lookalike I, II & III, 2015 in which stock images of cropped in industrial pipes and plastic tubes and saw blades, are fixed with electrical tape within patinated metal trays. These slick, hyper-real technicoloured images have been interrupted with pours of coloured acrylic paint, disrupting the picture plane. Playing with form and colour, in Digital Light Pool, 2015 Tompkins, lets free-flowing paint find its own course within the small opaque plastic tray. An incidental, layered abstract emerges dependent on the paints consistency and movement.

Phillip Zach’s variously coloured and sized segmented tile constellation, Mouse Trap, Lost Posture, Maze Runner and Quibble, 2015 brings to mind the 1984 tile-matching puzzle game Tetris, in which geometrically shaped connecting squares are re-orientated, fall and disappear when a line connection is made, or as dispersed sections of a puzzle or maze removed from the horizontal plane and brought up to the wall like a cartographic navigational schematic. These building blocks, modelled from the cubic segments of a chocolate bar are constructed from a specialised polymeric plaster mixed with diverse materials including coloured inks, annatto seeds, spices – madder root and turmeric, cochineal, silicon, ground coffee and wood melding the organic with the synthetic. For Zach, this gaming motif and the choice and decision in the navigation of a series of laws and codes, and the hacking thereof, within a closed pre-determined system is of interest. Here the work acts as an interlocutor, an abstracted cipher in the deconstruction and calculation of the gallery architecture.

Nina Canell (b. 1979, Sweden) lives and works in Berlin. Canell studied at the Dun Laoghaire Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Dublin. Selected solo exhibitions include Arko Art Center, Seoul, 2015; LundsKonsthall, Lund; Lulu, Mexico City; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Camden Arts Centre, London; Baltic Centre of Contemporary Art, Newcastle, all 2014; K21, Düsseldorf; Midway Contemporary Art, Minneapolis, both 2013; Lautlos, Hamburger Bahnhof Museum for Contemporary Art, Berlin, 2012, Kunstalle Fridericianum, Kassel, 2011. Her work has been included in the 13th Biennale de Lyon, Lyon, 2015; Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art, Rotterdam, De Appel Arts Centre, Amsterdam, all 2014; Hayward Gallery, London, 2012; 18th Biennale of Sydney, Sydney, Palais de Tokyo Paris, both 2012; Liverpool Biennale, Liverpool, 2010; Manifesta 7, Italy, 2008.

Dash (b. 1980, USA) lives and works in New York and New Mexico. She earned a BA from New York University in 2003 and an MFA from Columbia University in 2010. Solo exhibitions include Mehdi Chouakri, Berlin, 2015; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2014; White Flag Projects, St. Louis, 2013. Her work has been featured in thematic exhibitions such as Excavating the Contemporary, Jewish Historical Museum, Amsterdam; Sculptures Also Die, Strozzina Centre for Contemporary Culture, Florence; Repetition and Difference, Jewish Museum, New York, all 2015; Dream That Money Can’t Buy, Maxxi Museum, Rome, 2014; Pier 54 High Line, New York, 2014; The Possible, Berkeley Art Museum, Berkeley, 2014; Notations: Contemporary Drawing as Idea and Process, Kemper Art Museum, Washington University, St. Louis, 2012; Transient Response / Land Tender, High Desert Test Sites, Joshua Tree, 2011.

Simon Fujiwara (b. 1982, London) lives and works in Berlin. Fujiwara studied Architecture at Cambridge University, Cambridge and Fine Art at Städelschule, Frankfurt. Recent solo exhibitions include Lactose Intolerance, Dvir Gallery, Tel Aviv, 2015; Grand Tour, Kunstverein Braunschweig, Braunschweig, 2013; ArtSonje Center, Seoul, 2013; Simon Fujiwara: Since 1982, Tate St Ives, St Ives, 2012; The Boy Who Cried Wolf, Hau 1 Berlin, Performa 11, New York and SDMOMA, San Francisco, 2011; The Personal Effects of Theo Grünberg, Julia Stoschek Collection, Düsseldorf, 2010. His work has been included in British Art Show 8, Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Hayward Gallery, London, all 2015; CAC, Vilnius, Centre Pompidou, Paris, 2014; Mori Art Museum, Tokyo, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit, all 2013; Moma, New York, 2012, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, 2011. Upcoming solo exhibitions in 2016 include Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin; TARO NASU, Tokyo; Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery, Tokyo; The Obayashi Collection, Tokyo.

Lydia Gifford (b. 1979, UK) lives and works in London. Gifford studied at the Chelsea School of Art and Design, London, and the Royal College of Art, London where she graduated in 2006. Selected solo exhibitions include To. For. With at Laura Bartlett Gallery, London, 2015; Drawn, BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, 2014; Siding, Kunsthaus Baselland, Basel, 2013; The Neighbour, Laura Bartlett Gallery, London; Midday, David Roberts Art Foundation, London; Distances, Galerie Micky Schubert, Berlin, all 2012. Her work has been included in group exhibitions at Arezzo City Arts Festival, 2015; Castlefield Gallery, Manchester, 2015; Nogueras Blanchard, Madrid, 2013; Simon Dickinson, New York, 2013; Prairies, 3rd Edition of Les Ateliers de Rennes: Biennial for Contemporary Art, Rennes, 2012; Museum Boijmans, Rotterdam, 2012. Gifford has an upcoming solo exhibition in 2016 at the Centre d’Art et du Paysage, Ile de Vassiviere.

Hayley Tompkins (b. 1971, UK) lives and works in Glasgow. Tompkins earned both a BA and MFA from the Glasgow School of Art, Glasgow, respectively in 1994 and 1998. Selected solo exhibitions include Electric Magnetic Installation, The Modern Institute, Glasgow; Technicolor Hamburger, Drawing Room, Hamburg, both 2015; The Common Guild, Glasgow, 2014; Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, 2013; Currents, Studio Voltaire, London, 2011. She represented Scotland at the 55th Venice Biennale in 2013 and is currently featured in British Art Show 8, Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds. Her work has been included at Lismore Castle Arts, Lismore; Mendes Wood DM, Sao Paulo; The Tetley, Leeds, all 2015; The Imminence of Poetics, Sao Paulo Biennale, Sao Paulo, 2012; Watercolour, Tate Britain, London, 2011.

Phillip Zach (b. 1984) lives and works in Zurich. Zach studied at the University of Fine Arts, Hamburg and at Städelschule Frankfurt, where he graduated in 2012. Selected solo exhibitions include Shade Shifters, Koppe Astner, Glasgow, 2015; Content is Fiction, New Jerseyy, Basel, 2013; Hospital Postures, Johan Berggren Gallery, Malmö, 2013; Why is bad nice?, Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt, 2011. His work has been included in 31st Biennial of Graphic Arts, Ljubljana, Kunsthalle Freiburg, Freiburg; both 2015; Freedman Fitzpatrick, Los Angeles; White Flag, St Louis; Casey Kaplan, New York; Peles Empire, Istanbul; Moving Museum, Istanbul and Grand Century, New York, all 2014; Halle fuer Kunst, Luneburg, 2013; Portikus, Frankfurt; MMK Frankfurt, both 2012; Grimmuseum, Berlin; Kunstraum der Universitaet, Luneburg, both 2011; Kunstverein Heidelberg, Heidelberg, 2010.

[1] Chris Sharp, “Free-Space Path Loss” published by Lunds Konsthall, Lund, 2014
 

Tags: Nina Canell, N. Dash, Peles Empire, Simon Fujiwara, Gelatin, Lydia Gifford, Hayley Tompkins, Phillip Zach