We're a week into August, and the Exhibition, 'A Minor Place' - featuring work by Shaun Morris, Andrew Smith, and myself, will open at the end of the month. It's high time we changed up a gear with the publicity, so...
Design: Chris Cowdrill (Thanks, Chris) |
While we're at it, here's a copy of the Press Release that accompanies the show:
Press Release
‘A Minor Place’
An exhibition of
painting, printmaking and other artworks by
Hugh Marwood Shaun Morris Andrew Smith
The Artists Workhouse, The Royal
Victoria Works, off Redditch Road, Studley, Warwickshire,
B80 7AU
Saturday 3rd September to
Sunday 11th September 2016
Private View on Saturday 3rd
September 6.30-8.30pm
This
exhibition at The Artists Workhouse presents work by three Midlands based
artists: Leicester based Hugh Marwood, and Birmingham’s Shaun Morris and Andrew
Smith. Working across a range of practices including drawing, painting,
printmaking, photography, text and video the exhibition, in its broadest terms,
presents as its overarching theme different imaginative responses to the urban environment.
The
work on display is striking in its diversity but shares an interest across the
exhibition in the ‘minor places’ of the urban world: the lost voices and
forgotten messages; the haunted spaces and interim states; in fragmented texts
and uncoupled phrases; the encrypted clues and overlooked evidence; erasures
and amendments; erosion and decay.
In
Hugh Marwood’s heavily collaged paintings references abound to routes,
surfaces, edifices; and particularly the written texts found in those places. However, the work is equally about the trains
of thought and feeling they trigger, and generally tends towards nominally
abstract distillations - rather than to recognisable depictions.
His
current thematic preoccupations are with ideas of absence, disappearance and
erasure. Increasingly, the visual
triggers to which he is drawn, suggest vacant spaces, degraded materials, and
deleted or fragmented messages. The
resulting work thus focuses on fragments and vestiges, - on vanished meanings,
lost voices, and what barely remains. It
is a catalogue of ghosts and memories.
Many
of Marwood’s themes play out through the medium of paint, (or a kind of hybrid,
collage-heavy, form of painting).
However, increasingly, other media comes into play - including photography,
printmaking, and, on occasion, video and written pieces. The aim is to arrive at a situation where
imagery and ideas can evolve and mutate from each other, and switch between
different media, in a fluid and almost limitless manner.
In
artist Andrew Smith’s work the idea is to
use 'the urban environment', ideas and texts about it, features of it in
physical or image form, as material, or as floating signifiers that can be
reinscribed or reconfigured in different aesthetic and ideational contexts: one
example, with regard to the latter, might be, broadly speaking, the
psychogeographical, in the sense of features of the urban landscape being made
readable as indices of the psychological.
Andrew’s
paintings and prints also involve chance meetings. With some of the paintings – reading the map
one way – you might trace a short journey from object to photograph to
painting. Following this route leads to
minor territories on the edges of the iconic and the indexical – the latter
through some references to blurs and shallow focus. Having arrived in these territories what
follows might be a process of recognizing signs (or not), and perhaps circling
memorials of an accident.
The
prints present removals from various locations.
For example, ordinary objects, left on the street, having already
suffered the body-blow of being discarded, float bodilessly, illustrations of
their former selves – they respond to their transformation and relocation with
either (futile) anger or placidity.
Shaun
Morris’s paintings and prints represent the artist’s interest in exploring the
nocturnal edgelands and hidden landscape underneath the motorways that pass
over the Black Country and Birmingham. As well as depicting some unusual
abstract and dislocated images and sensations based on the reflections in the
canals, other scenes focus in on the many transit hubs and depots that back
onto the canals or are dotted alongside the motorway and their population of
parked lorries and other, often strange looking, vehicles.
There'll be loads more about it in coming posts but, for now, at least you know. Many of you may be wondering about the location, so here are a couple of links to Artists Workhouse:
https://artistsworkhouse.com
https://artistsworkhouse.com/category/up-and-coming/
Studley may not be a familiar place name but, trust me, it's easy to get to via the motorways, and only a step away from Birmingham, Stratford, Warwick, and numerous other West Midlands cultural hotspots. Come one - come all.
More soon...
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