Victoria Miro Gallery
London
16 Wharf Road N1 7RW
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Conrad Shawcross
dal 6/9/2011 al 30/9/2011
Tue-Sat 10am-6pm

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Conrad Shawcross



 
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6/9/2011

Conrad Shawcross

Victoria Miro Gallery, London

Sequential. The exhibition emphasises the artist's ongoing enquiry into the concepts of sequence and repetition of form. Situated on the borders of geometry and philosophy, physics and metaphysics, Shawcross's works appropriate often redundant methodologies and theories to create ambitious structural montages.


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Victoria Miro is delighted to present a new body of work by Conrad Shawcross, in the artist's second solo presentation with the gallery. Occupying both floors the exhibition emphasises the artist's ongoing enquiry into the concepts of sequence and repetition of form. Situated on the borders of geometry and philosophy, physics and metaphysics, Shawcross's works appropriate often redundant methodologies and theories to create ambitious structural montages. Sequential further experiments with ideal geometries, topologies and mathematical ratios; here these constructions are conceived as sequential systems and all deal with the problems and challenges of envisioning information and the invisible.

The Blind Aesthetic, a major new light work, forms the centrepiece of the lower gallery. Housed in a large glass vitrine stands a complex mechanical arm, at the end of which is a single light travelling at significant speed. The arm moves through a series of stepped ratios based on harmonics, creating a sequence of loops of light described in mathematics as torus knots. The speed and intensity of the light causes its path to burn onto the retina, and thus for this geometry to be revealed fleetingly to the viewer. In the same glass box but divided by a wall is a second, smaller chamber containing a simple desk and stool together with a sequence of small models made by an absent inhabitant. A significant discrepancy exists between the "blind" models that have been created in the second chamber, and what is actually taking place in the unobservable first chamber next door.

Linking the lower and upper floors through the gallery's dramatic architectural void is Skein Cone, a large suspended sculpture that elaborates on the formal rather than mechanical elements of Shawcross's ongoing rope machine series. A complex steel structure divides and subdivides out over a spherical plane resulting in hundreds of individual nodes to each of which is tied a coloured woollen yarn or skein that is pulled down to a shared focal point at the centre of the spherical plane above. Less empirical and more poetic than his usual aesthetic, Skein Cone attempts to convey essential aspects of gravity, space and light.

In the gallery upstairs the artist will install a grid of sixteen sculptures comprising of four sets of four works, all of which reinforce the exploration of series and sequences in Shawcross's practice. A set of geometrically rigorous Perimeter Studies exploit the properties of the dodecahedron (a regular twelve-sided solid). These are shown together with a new series in welded bronze that take the twenty-sided icosohedron as their fundamental shape. Both groups of works are preoccupied with ideas of the big bang and thus can be seem as radiant diagrams of expansion or contraction.

The third set in the grid is entitled Fraction and is a series of spiraling conal forms that seek to visually represent the mathematics of sound, and are best described as three-dimensional descriptions of chords falling into silence. Again, each piece is similar in form but differ subtly in the binary harmonic ratio and therefore the musical chord they represent. The final series tends more towards the organic with Harmonic Swarf Drawings, a set of four nylon sculptures that are created from a tangled, coiling length of swarf that describes the perplexing relation between the centre and periphery of a spinning drill and conjure beautiful patterns from the invisible, and like the Fraction series, relate to the chord ratios within the harmonic spectrum.

Conrad Shawcross was born in 1977 in London where he currently lives and works. Significant presentations of his work have taken place recently in Revealed, Turner Contemporary, Margate (2011); MONANISM, Museum of Old and New Art, Tasmania, Australia (2011); The Nervous System (Inverted), 590 Madison Avenue, New York, (2010); Chord, Kingsway Tram Tunnel, London (2009). Forthcoming exhibitions include a major new commission for MUDAM, Luxembourg opening early October 2011, and for 2012, Shawcross will participate in Titian: Metamorphosis, an unprecedented collaboration between the National Gallery and the Royal Ballet, part of the 2012 Cultural Olympiad.

Press enquiries: Kathy Stephenson, kathy@victoria-miro.com

Image: Conrad Shawcross

Opening: Wednesday 7

Victoria Miro
16 Wharf Road London
Hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 10am to 6pm, admission free
Admission free

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Kara Walker
dal 30/9/2015 al 6/11/2015

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