McCarthy transforms the ordinary, the overlooked into something more exceptional, more compelling - investing the language of the everyday with new and unexpected identities.
the glow is fading
Gasworks Gallery presents the first UK solo exhibition of new work by Caroline
McCarthy. Having recently won the AIB Art Prize in Ireland, McCarthy will show
two major sculptural installation pieces alongside new photographic works.
McCarthy transforms the ordinary, the overlooked into something more
exceptional, more compelling - investing the language of the everyday with new
and unexpected identities. Illusion is a reoccurring strategy, contesting viewer
expectation in works that set out to suggest the promise of surface whilst also
exposing it as thin and unreliable.
The photographic works, The Luncheon (2002) and Composition (Pumpkin and
Cherries) (2002), present the viewer with images of lavish still-life
compositions of fruit and vegetables that mimic the tradition of 17th Century
European Vanitas painting. Carefully fabricated from a sodden palette of
different coloured toilet paper, these still-life sculptures explore ideas of
abundance, excess, desire, and consumption. Whilst relishing in tromp l'oeil
painting techniques, the work nevertheless gently probes and subverts the genre
of still-life painting. In the project space at Gasworks Gallery, McCarthy will
show From The Testors Military Range (2002), which consists of an array of
plastic bottles and other familiar consumable packaging painted in various
shades of grey, silver and black enamel paint and presented on long glass
shelves filling one side of the gallery. The painting is such that the surface
of the objects offers a spectacle of luxury electronic goods on display for
purchase, a promise that is confounded on closer inspection.
Escape (2002) the largest of the works, continues the exploration of surface
appearances and desire through the presentation of an unoccupied domestic space,
defined within the main gallery by a standard timber frame. This artificial room
is filled with all manner of found objects. Collected over a number of months
the objects have one thing in common, which is that they have been found with a
leopard skin patterned surface. Looking through the Obars of the frame into a
living space smothered with a collection of obsessively accumulated exotica, the
viewer is confronted with the literal and metaphorical entrapment that such
excessive desire can create.
Caroline McCarthy was born in Dublin in 1971 and she has been based in London
since 1997. She has a BA in Fine Art from the National College of Art and
Design, Dublin and MA in Fine Art from Goldsmiths College, London. Recent
exhibitions include solo shows at Parker's Box, New York (2002) and Temple Bar
Gallery, Dublin (2002); CMYK/Greyscale, (cur. by R.G. Nesbitt), Tramway, Glasgow
(2002); Now is the Time, (cur. by K.Freed), Dorsky Project Space, New York
(2002); Neverland, Cell Project Space, London (2002); The Spare Room, VTO,
London (2002); Tirana Biennale, (sel. By P.Ellis), Albania (2001); From the
Poetic to the Political - Irish Art Now, Irish Museum of Modern Art collection
touring U.S. (2000); and Postneoamateurism, Chisenhale Gallery, London (1998).
Her work is included in the collections of the Irish Museum of Modern Art, the
Arts Council of Ireland and a number of private collections.
Gasworks Gallery is open Wednesday - Sunday 12-6pm. Admission is free.
(closed 22nd December 2002 - 3rd January 2003)
Preview: Thursday 28th November 2002 6-9pm
With support from London Arts, Arts Council of Ireland, The Department of Arts
Sport & Tourism Ireland, AIB Art Prize, John Jones artSauce and The Swan, Stockwell.
Special thanks to Parker's Box, New York; Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin; and Lotta
Hammer, London.
GASWORKS GALLERY
155 Vauxhall Street, The Oval, London SE11 5RH
Tel: 020 7582 6848 Fax: 020 7582 0159