Harrison's paintings, sculptures and collages make strange our relationship to the natural world. The arist makes use of found materials and characters and stories from literature, myth, and history to create his distinctive personal mythology.
“Existence takes its name from ancient Egypt, where
the hare was used as a hieroglyph for the word
denoting existence.” David Harrison.
Victoria Miro presents British artist David Harrison’s second solo exhibition at the gallery to coincide with the
publication of a major monograph on the artist with texts by Alistair Robinson, introduction by Lucinda
Lambton and interview with Peter Doig.
Harrison’s paintings, sculptures and collages make strange our relationship to the natural world. Harrison makes
use of found materials and characters and stories from literature, myth, and history to create his distinctive
personal mythology. In his imagined world, we encounter “the re-enchantment of nature”, in which the imagined
and the real, the magical and the everyday, and the prosaic and the fantastical are wholly intertwined.
Existence reflects Harrison’s personal mythology through a new room-scale installation, recent sculpture and a
new suite of paintings around the intoxicating power of perfume, alongside some of his earlier works.
Harrison’s most recent paintings celebrate the “smells of nature, sex and chemistry” to overpower our senses.
Each work is based upon a historical scent by the master perfumer, Guerlain, and conjures a hallucinatory,
luminous vision of a netherworld which resembles our own, but is filled with black magic. Our guides through
these worlds are a glamorous muse, and a cast of animals, where every species seemed to be associated with
witchcraft. Hares, cats, and owls laugh at our follies: in Harrison’s imagined world, animals “take on human
qualities, to mock our existence, whilst we destroy our own habitat, regardless. Whatever we make ugly,
nature will make beautiful again.” Harrison’s works guide us through a beguiling world of visions and
apparitions, in which nature is a source of endless fecundity.
In the gallery’s upstairs space, Harrison has created his most ambitious work to date: a 14-foot high
architectural folly. ‘The Shadow of the Old World’ is a gothic structure, coal-black and replete with four steeples.
Covered in bitumen, peppered with barbed wire, and topped with dolls’ heads and birds, the work is akin to a
temple for an as-yet-undiscovered religion from a strange part of the globe. The exterior is dark and perplexing
– hubcaps stand in for circular windows and pointed lancet windows thrust threateningly earthwards instead of
skywards. Once inside, the viewer encounters a patterned interior, and upon peering through a looking glass
sees the rotting figures of redundant scarecrows, around which ghosts of pigeons can be heard.
Text by Alistair Robinson
Victoria Miro Gallery
16 Wharf Road N1 7RW - London
Admission Free
Tues – Sat 10am -6pm.