'Mental Mapping'. (Foreground): My 'Cement Cycle'. (Background): Work By Andrew Smith |
Well, our exhibition 'Mental Mapping: New Work By Andrew Smith & Hugh Marwood' came and went, and already feels like it's receding in the rearview mirror at an alarming rate. I haven't been even remotely able to keep up with events in real time here, so we're very much in the realms of retrospective speculation from here on in. Actually, the tragic nature of fleeting time was evident even in the midst of the show. Knowing it would
be my only chance to spend time alone with it, I deliberately went into Rugby Art Gallery & Museum a few hours before our Private View, to spend a while thinking about what we’d achieved before our guests
arrived.
(L.): 'Orfeo'. (R.): My 'Map 1-4' |
When we secured the exhibition slot, last year, I assumed I would exhibit
a selection of existing work, along with anything new that I might complete in the interim. However, in the event,
both Andrew Smith and I ended up producing two bodies of completely new work
specifically for the show. In fact, my
participation in last September’s ‘Melbourne Arts Festival’ meant that all my ‘Mental
Mapping’ work was actually completed in about eight months. Only now am I coming to terms with just how
hard I’ve actually been working during that period.
Personally speaking, it became clear this would be the case once we’d arrived at the
exhibition title and I started to think seriously about the themes it suggested. It felt like a real opportunity to pin down the relationship between various urban texts,
and the layers of meaning they might release, with reference to specific familiar locations. The first
two elements have existed in my work for some time, but the third felt somewhat
underdeveloped. I’d attempted something
consciously site-related in my stuttering ‘Belgrave Gate Project’, but that felt like a bit of a false start. As it turns out, the current ‘Map’ paintings provided an effective
escape route from those conundrums, being essentially a return to a more
formally focused, abstract mode of picture-making - but with added
cartographical value and found texts from my chosen sites.
My 'Map 6, 7 & 5' |
Furthermore, the
itch to work in other media, besides painting, could be scratched - I now
realised, equally well within the exhibition’s overall thematic
premise(s). My photographic ‘Cement Cycle’ project, and the ‘Orfeo’ video collaboration with Andrew
are the fulfillment of that. ‘Cement Cycle’ is the first time I’ve
envisaged my own photography as something exhibitable in its own right, and feels like a distinct widening of my repertoire.
In reality, it may be that ‘Orfeo’
is the real pivotal piece in ‘Mental
Mapping’, for a couple of other important reasons.
Andrew Smith & Hugh Marwood, 'Orfeo', Digital Video, 2015 |
The first is that
it marks my most successful attempt, to date, to collaborate with another artist on equal
terms, and with a consequent leap of faith.
It involved a definite move away from my default comfort zones in
several respects, and not a little experiential learning on the hoof. I’ve been through the whys and wherefores of
the film in a previous post, but I am genuinely gratified by how well it has
been received, generally. Despite its
obscure, elliptical qualities, people seem happy to stay with it, and to enjoy
being benignly confused. I hope this
means there’s a richness to both the imagery and the language, that transcends
any need for definitive meaning. One
viewer claimed to be genuinely moved by the twilit image of spilt paint,
(always a delight to discover it’s not just me), whilst another felt that the
vocal tone of Andrew’s narration struck exactly the right note. I remain painfully aware of some of the
film’s technical shortcomings, (mostly in-camera), but all of this makes me
rather proud of our little film, and genuinely happy that we made the attempt. I certainly hope to do more work in this area
in the future.
Anyone Want To Buy A Plinth? |
The other obvious
point about ‘Orfeo’, is that it forms
a clear bridge between the two, distinct bodies of work on show. It’s the point at which my attunement to the
resonances of place; - my sense of ‘being there’ as thoughts and feelings unfold
at a certain site, meet Andrew’s expression of the subconscious through the
weaving of obscure, often absurdist narratives.
It’s within those that he projects his own, often deeply personal,
internal accounts onto the objects and situations around him.
‘Orfeo’ was, I suppose, a case of me inviting Andrew to weave an account around my chosen surroundings, and to do something a little deeper or more elliptical with them than I might have
otherwise achieved. In passing, I’m
struck by the fact that he acknowledges the influence of Kevin Lynch’s ‘The Image Of The City’ [1.] on his concept of the film, just as it
was on ‘Cement Cycle’. In my case, this is fairly explicit; - the
organisational logic of the five pairs of ‘Elements’ derives directly from Lynch’s ideas, and the captions
incorporated into each image are my re-written interpretations of certain
sections of his text. In ‘Orfeo’, it’s far more nuanced I feel, -
more veiled in poetry perhaps, but the influence is still evident to me in a
number of ways [2.].
My 'Cement Cycle', (10 Pieces), Inkjet Prints On Concrete, 2015 |
This contrast
between internally derived (Andrew), and externally derived (Me) stimuli, is
probably the crux of the exhibition. Only
now, do I really appreciate just how superficially extrovert my own paintings
may look in relation to his, - in terms of colour and sheer wordiness, if
nothing else [3.]. It
seems that Andrew’s strategy for dealing with his own psychodramas is to turn
to internal investigation, whilst mine may be to become visually extrovert, and to run off at the mouth.
Andrew Smith, (L.): 'Flag', (R.): 'The Way Things Happen', Computer Drawing , Inkjet Print On Paper, (Centre): 'The Art Of Camouflage', Acrylic On Canvas, All 2015 |
In the light of
this, Andrew’s largest painting, ‘The Art
Of Camouflage’ feels like a key work. At first glance, it’s less photographically oriented than his other canvases, with more
than a suggestion of classic Surrealism, and even a hint of Cubist space. However, the implications of a profile head populated by submarines, are pretty clear, and a tendency towards (partial) concealment, and
an urge to dive beneath the surface are key themes within all the work
surrounding it.
Work By Andrew Smith |
Andrew's more
photographic paintings are generally suggestive of still-life arrangements or
domestic interiors, but I’m unable to avoid also reading them as spaces one
might inhabit. The odd viewpoints,
ambiguities of scale and deliberate unfocusing of imagery owe a clear debt to
Gerhard Richter, as does the care with which they are painted. However, they remind me, even more, of the
paranoid way that David Lynch’s film camera will regularly close in on some,
suddenly threatening domestic detail at moments of extreme psychic disturbance.
Andrew Smith, (L.): 'Family Portrait', (Centre), 'Little Navigator', (R.): 'Mummy', Acrylic On Canvas, 2015 |
What becomes
apparent from spending time with the paintings, and in conversation with Andrew,
is that certain implied narratives run through both the paintings
and the accompanying digital prints, as a body.
This is most overt in the recurrence of two implied characters, ‘Little
Navigator’ and ‘The Wound Dresser’. They lend their names to a pair of
paintings, but also conduct a written exchange in the print, ‘Conversation’. Perhaps we shouldn’t be too surprised that
the final line of dialogue reads, “But words are not for explanation”.
My own initial interpretation was to see the Navigator as male, and the
Dresser as female, and I hold to that view.
However, having gained extra insight from Andrew, I now realise
there is something more darkly Freudian about ‘The Wound Dresser’ as a painting, than I might have originally imagined. What might seem benignly symbolic of female
domesticity, actually imply something more emasculating, it
seems.
Andrew Smith, 'Conversation', Computer Drawing, Inkjet Print On Paper, 2015 |
Andrew Smith, 'The Wound Dresser', Acrylic On Canvas, 2015 |
It’s not really
for me to delve too deeply into such psychosexual undercurrents here -
not least because there is, I’m sure, more than a little autobiographical
content in Andrew’s work. It’s perhaps
sufficient to add that there is more than a suggestion of something lost, wrecked or discarded in the multiple images of wooden debris, abandoned
furniture, scattered drawers, and castaway references which recur throughout the prints. It would be for Andrew to fill in more specific
detail, but perhaps words really are not for explanation.
Andrew Smith, 'We Must've Taken A Wrong Turning', Computer Drawing, Inkjet Print On Paper, 2015 |
Andrew Smith, 'Blue Lagoon', Inkjet Print On Paper, 2015 |
What is evident
in Andrew’s prints is a willingness to incorporate photographic imagery with a
variety of other modes of depiction, and to operate through several layers of
potential meaning in each piece. The photographic
aspect allies them superficially to my ‘Cement
Cycle’ in the exhibition, I suppose, as well as to ‘Orfeo’. However, I think
the more meaningful connection would be the attempts that both of us habitually make, to have numerous parallel ‘realities’, (or more likely, - fictions), running
through our work.
Andrew Smith, Prints |
By bringing together these
separate streams within an expressively neutral, digital realm, Andrew creates an arena in which each statement, representational
convention, or implied medium, is introduced on equal terms with everything
else. His is a form of virtual collage,
in contrast to my own, distinctly material form. That interplay between media, and the
leveling-out effects of digital translation are things I’m keen to take more
account of myself in the near future. The examples of Dan Perfect, Sigmar Polke, Christopher Wool, Charlene Von Hayl and Albert Oehlen have all stimulated me to think about all this in recent
weeks.
Andrew Smith, 'The Way Things Happen', Computer Drawing, Inkjet Print On Paper, 2015 |
Andrew Smith, 'On Arrival', Computer Drawing, Inkjet Print On Paper, 2015 |
Whilst ‘Mental Mapping’ may be pretty small
beer in the grand scheme of things, it feels like a significant advance for me,
both artistically, and in terms of belief in my own abilities to make something
happen from soup to nuts. It also proves
that creative collaboration can be an equable and rewarding process that need
not involve endless frustrating compromise, as once I might have foolishly
believed.
It’s been a wholly positive
experience for me overall, and represents my acceptance that, if you’re at all
serious about producing art, then going public with it periodically is all part
of the deal. If the individual, original
art object is to retain its validity in an increasingly mediated world, (no question,
in my mind), then sheer presence in the room remains its greatest strength,
after all. Tucked away with the work in
my back bedroom, for months at a time, I live on top of it to such a degree
that, in the end, I can hardly see it anymore. Putting the work in a
neutral space, open to the response of others, is the only real way to tell
how much progress has been made, and if it really can cut it out there in the
world.
An exhibition can sometimes feel like the end of a particular creative phase, but
actually, I see the whole process as far more cyclical than that. As I sat with our show for a while, I was
thinking about the clues it provided to what might come next, as much as about
what had just concluded.
* Bob Dylan, 'No Time To Think'. From the album, 'Street Legal', CBS/Special Rider Music, 1978
[1.]: Kevin Lynch, ‘The Image Of The City’, Massachusetts USA, The M.I.T Press, 1960
[2.]: Lynch himself wasn’t adverse to a little
playful obfuscation it seems, as can be seen here
So good to hear it's been such a positive experience. Just from your photos here, and the images you've previously posted of your work, I can get a good sense of how it was. I wish I could have visited in person.
ReplyDeleteCheers for your encouragement. I certainly hope to exhibit more in the future, so perhaps something will appear on a wall nearer you one day.
ReplyDelete