Ormeau Baths Gallery
Belfast
18a Ormeau Avenue BT2 8HS
02890312232 FAX 02890312232
WEB
Appropriation
dal 10/4/2002 al 25/5/2002
02890321402 FAX 02890312232
WEB
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Ormeau Baths Gallery



 
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10/4/2002

Appropriation

Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast

'Appropriation' brings together new work by eight leading artists of their generation and reflects the diversity and complexity of current visual art practice in Ireland.


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Ian Charlesworth, Martin Healy, Allan Hughes, John Paul McAree, Niamh McCann, Mary McIntyre, Susan MacWilliam, Dan Shipsides.

'Appropriation' brings together new work by eight leading artists of their generation and reflects the diversity and complexity of current visual art practice in Ireland. The exhibition examines our relationship to landscape, politics, science and popular culture and as the title suggests reflects the way in which much current visual art practice whether intentionally or inadvertently assimilates art historical and contemporary cultural references.

John Paul McAree's paintings look at the mythical status within Irish history and popular culture of political figures such as Michael Collins and Eamon de Valera. The works refer to a hybrid of styles from Richter to Auerbach to Yeats the paintings are deliberately deceptive in that they at first seem nostalgic, scenic and uncontroversial until the sources for the images reveal themselves to be sites or signifiers of troubled histories. No less controversial are the paintings/drawings of Ian Charlesworth in which he replicates UVF graffiti found in public lavatories. The paintings move from almost total abstraction to the stark graphic symbolism of the UVF text. The work seeks to question the affiliations and authorship ascribed to in this and other paramilitary graffiti. Mary McIntyre's new series of photographs can be traced to the 19th century German Romantic and Dutch landscape paintings of Casper David Friedrich and Jacob Van Ruisdael. Incorporating the allegory of traditional painting McIntyre comments on our current relationship with the industrial and rural landscape.

Martin Healy's series of photographs 'Looking For Jody': Amityville (2001) starts as an exploration of the town of Amityville, New York which was the subject of a book and feature film in the 1970's. Healy is interested in exploring the crossover point of memory based on cinematic experience and the memory of real-life events, specifically how they blend to create a new fiction. Susan MacWilliam also draws on cinematic references in her new video work based on Dario Argentos obscure 1971 film 'Four Flies on Grey Velvet', MacWilliam's work 'After Image' delves into the bizarre and the extraordinary exploring the myth that the last image seen before death is retained on the retina of the eye. Dan Shipsides, Allan Hughes and Niamh McCann similarly make reference to such diverse source material as sport, science and military camouflage to create an exhibition, which is as rich in meaning as it is in medium.

Image: John Paul McAree, 'Collins March' 1999

Open: Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
Admission: Free
Wheelcahir Access

Ormeau Baths Gallery
18a Ormeau Avenue
Belfast
BT2 8HS
Northern Ireland
Tel: 028 90321402
Fax: 028 90312232

IN ARCHIVIO [21]
The Nature of Things
dal 14/12/2005 al 27/1/2006

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