Mittelland. The exhibition features six vast oil paintings which explore a sense of displacement within anonymous urban scenes that are both familiar and alien. The locations are primarily peripheral or transitional spaces, such as corridors, gates, stairs and a balcony and make reference to the idea of relocation and dislocation.
Jonathan Wateridge, currently on showat the Palazzo Grassi in Venice, will be exhibiting a collection of new and unseen paintings in All Visual Arts Autumn show, during the Frieze Art Fair.
The exhibition, Mittelland, consists of six vast oil paintings (often exceeding 3m x 4m) which explore a sense of displacement within anonymous urban scenes that are both familiar and alien. The locations are primarily peripheral or transitional spaces, such as corridors, gates, stairs and a balcony and make reference to the idea of relocation and dislocation.
The notion of emergence and recession also reflects the way the figures inhabit the space of the paintings; nothing is fixed, the characters are merely passing through these states.
One canvas, Re-painting, shows a middle aged couple in their building site of a house: the walls are in the process of
being plastered; there are dust sheets, paint pots and decorating tools scattered around. It is an environment in total flux.
In the midst of working on the space, the figures are covered in a layer of dust; this appears to absorb them back into the environment as if they have become ghosts in their own home.
Ultimately, the world Wateridge portrays is entirely fabricated. The artist paints what he describes as “elaborate fictions with visible seams”, building full scale movie-like sets for each painting in his studio and employing actors to pose as characters. The underlying fact that the environments are all elaborate fictional constructions is used to disturb the relationship that the viewer forms with the figures depicted.
In comparison to his previous series, Mittelland is more sober in feel. The vibrant palette and overt dramatisation of the earlier work, synonymous with Hollywood, is replaced by a more subdued and isolated portrayal of his characters and what they stand for. The paintings are intentionally unspectacular in location and action, but remain highly ambitious in scale and resonant in their simplicity.
The quiet transience of the situations depicted works against the monumentality of the canvases themselves. Within the paintings of Mittelland, the intimate is made epic and the prosaic becomes vital.
Jonathan Wateridge
Born in Zambia in 1972, Wateridge attended the Glasgow School of Art in the early 1990s before rejecting painting for almost fifteen years. Since his return to the medium, his work has been collected by Francois Pinault, Charles Saatchi, the Olbricht Foundation and Benedict Taschen amongst others; and can be found in the Anita Zabludowicz Collection.
Wateridge has exhibited in critically acclaimed shows such as The Saatchi Gallery’s Newspeak: British Art Now, an exhibition showcasing the next generation of British artists, and The World Belongs to You at the Francois Pinault Foundation's Palazzo Grassi in Venice.
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Private view 12th October 7 - 9 pmOpening Times: Tuesday - Saturday 10- 6pm
All Visual Arts (AVA)
2 Omega Place, London