On Reflection. Harrison's new exhibition is a series of work which explores ideas, images and complicated visual ideas about how we reflect in/on two dimensions.
“Pop art crossed with a nascent feminist sensibility, and spiked with mordant humour” – Guardian
PayneShurvell is pleased to present Margaret Harrison's second exhibition of drawings and
paintings at the gallery. Harrison was one of the most distinguished feminist artists and cultural
activists to emerge out of the UK in the 1970s. I am a Fantasy, her first show at the gallery opened in
April 2011 to great popular and critical acclaim.
Harrison's new exhibition, On Reflection, is a series
of work, which explores ideas, images and
complicated visual ideas about how we reflect in/on
two dimensions.
The mirror as a central device in European painting
has long focused on the female figure in works like
Van Eyck’s Marriage of Arnolfini, Titian’s Venus with a
Mirror and Manet’s A Bar at the Folies-Bergère.
Harrison’s work for On Reflection moves away from
the traditional depiction of vanity and the male gaze to
make work that challenges gender stereotyping and
subverts images of identity and power. Harrison,
importantly, uses humour as a tool to cross
boundaries and challenge preconceptions.
As Harrison says: “We are watching, viewing and
reflecting on what looks at us, and what we look at.
The images, which reflect our cultures of masculinity
and femininity collide with transgendered realities not
essentially feminine and not essentially masculine as
a series of macho/femo notions in a range of
complicated sliding scales”.
Hugh Hefner as a Bunny Boy and the first Captain
America (1971) were shown in the exhibition I am a Fantasy (PayneShurvell London, 2011), along
with more recent drawings and paintings. Some of these concerns are currently on show at Tate
Liverpool, in Tracing the Century (drawings from the Tate Collection) and included in ‘Glam’ the
Performance of Style also at Tate Liverpool and then touring to Germany and Austria. Her work will
also be part of a group exhibition, Keep Your Timber Limber, opening at the ICA this June.
Related works are on show in the 2013 Northern Art Prize at the Leeds Art Gallery for which Margaret
Harrison has been short-listed. The prize winner will be announced on 23 May.
Margaret Harrison was born in 1940 in Wakefield and lives and works in Cumbria, England. She
studied at the Carlisle College of Art, Royal Academy Schools, London and the Academy of Art in
Perugia, Italy. She has exhibited extensively since her first solo show in London in 1971, appearing in
the touring feminist retrospective ‘WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution’ at MOCA LA and PS1 New
York and solo showThe Bodies Are Back at Intersection for the Arts San Francisco in 2010. I am a
Fantasy, her first London show in 40 years, opened at PayneShurvell in 2011. Her show Preoccupy
opened at Silberkuppe gallery in Berlin in 2012. MIMA (Middlesborough Institute of Modern Art) will
present a solo show of Margaret's work in 2015.Margaret Harrison's work is part of the permanent
collections of the Tate, Arts Council of Britain, University of California, Carlisle City Art Gallery and the
V&A.
About the gallery
PayneShurvell opened in June 2010 (“It's heartening to see the arrival of modest but confident new
gallery PayneShurvell”- Time Out) and is run by James Payne and Joanne Shurvell. James Payne, a
Fine Art graduate of Central St Martins, is a curator and the film editor of Garageland magazine.
Joanne Shurvell, a former Communications Director at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, is
a freelance arts writer and arts marketing consultant. PayneShurvell represents a group of
international artists and encourages an inter-generational dialogue, with established artists alongside
young and emerging artists.
Private view Thursday 16 May 6-8pm
Payne Shurvell
16 Hewett Street, London
Opening hours: Wed-Fri 2-6pm;
Sat 12-6pm; Sun 3 March 12-6pm and by appointment
Admission free