Vegas Gallery (new venue)
London
274 Poyser Street
+44 (0) 203 581 5404 FAX +44 (0) 772 675 0762
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Kalliphilia
dal 1/2/2012 al 9/3/2012
wed-sat 12-18

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Vegas Gallery



 
calendario eventi  :: 




1/2/2012

Kalliphilia

Vegas Gallery (new venue), London

The exhibition showcases works by a selection of visual contemporary artists who unusually embrace beauty in their practice. They are unified in their affirmation of the aesthetic and by their desire to engage their audience through making work that is visually appealing.


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There is something crazy about a culture in which the value of beauty becomes controversial - Peter Schjeldahl “Notes on Beauty”

There was a time when art was all about beauty. Every painting, every sculpture, every piece of music strove to be beautiful. Beauty was the most perfect kind of knowledge, reconciling the sensual and rational parts of the brain.

The movements and isms of the 20th century changed this. Avant-garde intellectuals challenged the accepted notions of aesthetics, and by the end of the century it was the anti-aesthetics of post-modernism that dominated, with conceptual art ruling the roost. Beauty had been rejected, cast out - considered at best irrelevant and frivolous, at worst decadent, oppressive, and wrong. Indeed, so potent was this reaction that it coined a term: kalliphobia.

So where does that leave beauty now? Has it been reclaimed? Can it be reclaimed? Should it be reclaimed? What is it that makes beautiful art so troublesome, and why does the anti-aesthetic continue to hold the moral high-ground? Is it because a beautiful painting is too quick to convert into a commodity? Or are we so conscious of our troubled world that beauty seems somehow inappropriate, out of touch, quaint?

Kalliphilia showcases works by a selection of visual contemporary artists who unusually, and perhaps even unfashionably, embrace beauty in their practice. Such an approach can seem surprising in an art world where for so long beauty has been steadfastly avoided. But these artists don’t pursue it blindly, or slavishly, but rather use it as a means to an end. They are unified in their affirmation of the aesthetic, and by their desire to engage their audience through making work that is visually appealing.

Together, they demonstrate how beauty can be more than just skin deep. Emma McNally shows how it can communicate and inform, introducing pictorially thoughts and theories usually explored through the written word and acting as an eloquent entry point to more complex ideas. Her intensely worked drawings embody the philosophical concepts she investigates, and exist as physical manifestations of ways of seeing the world.

Tom Gallant proves that beauty can provoke as well as please in his exquisite pornographic arabesques, which delight and shock in equal measure. Hugo Wilson demonstrates that beauty is not always straightforward: the misleading simplicity of his holy-water-colour works belies their subversive subtext, and Al Braithwaite, in his clever manipulation of existing objects, casts new light on social and political issues and offers up new perspectives on contemporary debates in a smart and succinct way. Beauty can be dynamic, as in Hugo Dalton’s sketches of dancers, which celebrate movement and happily straddle the divide between abstraction and figuration, or it can be quietly contemplative, as in Emma Bennett’s timeless still-lives. Beauty is also capable of disturbing and unsettling, as it does in Hester Finch’s empty landscapes and distorted figures and Andy Harper’s thorny undergrowths of twisted nature. Perhaps most importantly, beauty can tap into the very essence of what it means to be human through a primal language that is illustrated perfectly in Whitney McVeigh’s abstractions.

Beauty is not vapid. Beauty is powerful, engaging and democratic. It makes us receptive. In contrast to the anti-aesthetic, which reinforces art’s elitism, beauty opens doors. And that is what this show seeks to celebrate.

VEGAS is delighted to welcome Jessica Carlisle to the gallery as acting Creative Director. Jessica will continue to grow the gallery as Suzanne Schurgers has done so successfully over the past five years and begins her appointment with the group exhibition Kalliphilia. VEGAS would like to thank Suzanne Schurgers for the enormous dedication she has shown to the gallery and wishes her the best of luck in her decision to pursue her career in media production.

Image: Andy Harper

Private View: Thursday 2 February 18:30 - 21.00

VEGAS
274 Poyser Street London
Hours: wed-sat 12-18
Admission free

IN ARCHIVIO [8]
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dal 11/9/2012 al 5/10/2012

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