The Blue Gallery
London
15 Great Sutton Street
+44 020 74905749 FAX +44 020 74905749
WEB
Veronica Bailey
dal 26/9/2005 al 29/10/2005
+44 020 74903833 FAX +44 020 74905749
WEB
Segnalato da

Giles Baker-Smith


approfondimenti

Veronica Bailey



 
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26/9/2005

Veronica Bailey

The Blue Gallery, London

An exhibition of 2 new bodies of work. With Postscript, she addresses the written correspondence from 1937 of model/muse/ photographer/war correspondent Lee Miller mostly with artist/writer and ultimately husband Roland Penrose, but also with her wartime employer, Audrey Withers, editor of Vogue. In About Face, in the gallery's project space, she has manipulated a wooden Man Ray's figurine into a variety of provocative and claustrophobic poses


comunicato stampa

Postscript – Main gallery
About Face – Project space
by Veronica Bailey

The Directors of the Blue Gallery are pleased to announce an exhibition of 2 new bodies of work by Veronica Bailey entitled Postscript and About Face.

In 2003 Bailey won the inaugural Jerwood Photography Prize for 2 Willow Road, a photographic essay on the library of modernist architect Ernö Goldfinger. With Postscript, she addresses the written correspondence from 1937 of model/muse/ photographer/war correspondent Lee Miller (1907-77) mostly with artist/writer and ultimately husband Roland Penrose (1900-1984), but also with her wartime employer, Audrey Withers, editor of Vogue. Bailey was granted full access by the Lee Miller Archive at Farley Farm in East Sussex and the resulting work largely concerns itself with letters written during World War II, by the end of which she was a photographer accredited to the US Army. During the year after D-Day she witnessed the siege of St Malo, the http://www.leemiller.co.uk/gallerydisp.aspx?cat=12 Liberation of Paris, the fighting in Luxembourg and Alsace, the Russian/American link up at Torgau and the liberation of Buchenwald and Dachau.

Although Postscript echoes themes addressed in 2 Willow Road, for Bailey, and hence ultimately the viewer, the involvement is more personal than that series. Much of this correspondence represents the residual echoes of a passionately charged relationship and while we are never privy to the content, Bailey’s titles, drawn from the texts, and the form of the work itself leave one in little doubt as to its power despite Miller’s apparent inability in this period to stand still and immerse herself in it, even after hostilities ended – they actually only married in 1947. The images illuminate this through the visual evidence of the letters/telegrams themselves, the privacy of the lovers often protected by the original envelopes, yet their intimacy somehow emphasized. Shirking a conventional narrative, Bailey has again formulated a visually arresting and meditative body of work from simple and spare resources usually regarded as the rather arid fiefdom of the professional biographer.

About Face, in the gallery’s project space, on the other hand, marks a distinct departure. Loosely referential to Man Ray’s erotically humorous Mr and Mrs Woodman series of 1947, Bailey has manipulated a wooden artist’s figurine into a variety of provocative and claustrophobic poses cropped tightly within the image borders. The imposing scale of the works and the lush hues of well thumbed wood against a dense black background act as counterpoint to the overtones of gender subjugation and servility suggested by these poses. Again Bailey’s titles emphasize her intentions, here referencing female artists broadly affiliated with the surrealist movement.

For further information and/or visual material, please contact Giles Baker-Smith or Philip Godsal on 020 74903833.

PRIVATE VIEW – Tuesday 27th September 6-8.30pm

The Blue Gallery
15 Great Sutton Street
London EC1V 0BX
open
Monday – Friday 10am – 6pm
Saturday 11pm – 3pm

IN ARCHIVIO [12]
Tim Simmons
dal 29/11/2005 al 27/1/2006

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