Alana Riley
Adam Ekberg
Lilly McElroy
Li Wei
Patrick Graham
Timeteo Viti
Gerard Dillon
Jimmie Durham
Kitty Rogers
Giorgio Cugno
Johan Lorbeer
Michael Klien
Dorothy Cross
Marina Abramovic
Aideen Barry
William Forsythe
Brian Duggan
Ilya Kabakov
Michael Warren
Michael Craig-Martin
Grace Weir
Sean Scully
Maud Cotter
Alex Pentek
Rachel Thomas
An exhibition that includes videos, sculptures and paintings by contemporary artists, as well as a number of historic paintings. An awareness of physics informs the work of many contemporary artists exposed, among them Marina Abramovic, Aideen Barry, William Forsythe and Brian Duggan. There are drawings by Ilya Kabakov, and recent sculptures by Dorothy Cross and Michael Warren. Warren's Tempo Rubato II, directly inspired by the writings of Weil, is made of massive interlocking beams of timber.
Gravity is a major exhibition that includes videos, sculptures and paintings by contemporary artists, as well
as a number of historic paintings. The works in Gravity are intriguing, beautiful and thought-provoking,
while also expressing a profound understanding of contemporary life and thought, and the relationship of
humanity to the universe. The theme is not only literal, in terms of looking at how artists use this physical
force that binds the universe together, but also metaphorical, in the sense reflected in Gravity and Grace, a
book written by French philosopher Simone Weil, where issues of mortality and the infinite are explored.
Weil identified in the human spirit a resistance to the inexorable forces of nature, and she believed that mankind could literally “rise above” these limitations.
This awareness of gravity is perennial in Western art and culture, and Renaissance painters often depicted
figures either bound to the earth, or soaring above it, to express a spiritual aspiration. In the nineteenth century, awareness of the universe was enhanced, not least by William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, who made
the first detailed drawings of nebulae, vast stellar bodies whose spiral form is defined by gravitational forces.
An awareness of physics informs the work of many contemporary artists in Gravity, among them Marina
Abramovic, Aideen Barry, William Forsythe and Brian Duggan. There are drawings by Ilya Kabakov, and
recent sculptures by Dorothy Cross and Michael Warren. Warren’s Tempo Rubato II, directly inspired by
the writings of Weil, is made of massive interlocking beams of timber. Dorothy Cross’s Whale, a spectacular work where the skeleton of a whale is suspended in the Crawford’s sculpture galleries, and Stalactite,
a video filmed in a cave in Co. Clare, both reveal the artist’s interest in the relationship of mankind to the
natural world. Michael Craig-Martin’s On the Table, dating from 1970, where four buckets and a table are
counterbalanced in mid-air, is a key work of the Conceptual art movement. In a number of recent videos, the
artist Grace Weir explores the world of astronomy and physics, while two paintings by Sean Scully show
his awareness, expressed through the medium of oil painting, of a profound sense of gravitas. Maud Cotter’s
sculpture One Way of Containing Air and Alex Pentek’s folded paper sculpture defy expectations, seeming
both heavy and light at the same time.
The art of photography is important in Gravity. Works by Alana Riley, Adam Ekberg, Lilly McElroy and Li
Wei bring an additional dimension to the exhibition, where movement is frozen in time. Also in Gravity, a
recent diptych by Patrick Graham, Somewhere Jerusalem, is exhibited alongside a Renaissance crucifixion
panel by Timeteo Viti. Similarly, the juxtaposition between Gerard Dillon’s Space Circus, where performers appear to float effortlessly, and Raphael’s Entombment, dominated by a dread sense of weight, provides
again a different way of appreciating these two works of art. Works by Jimmie Durham, Kitty Rogers and
Giorgio Cugno also illustrate an alertness and sensitivity, both to the human psyche and to the everyday
world, an alertness that is a key feature of Weil’s philosophy.
Image: Adam Ekberg, Untitled, 2009. Thomas Robertello Gallery
GRAVITY EXTRAS
DANCE, PERFORMANCE AND OFF-SITE VIDEO STALACTITE
July 14th-16th: Live performance on Opera Lane by Berlin artist Johan Lorbeer.
Sponsored by the Goethe Institut- Ireland and O’Callaghan Properties. Details on Gallery website and exhibition flyer.
July 15th-16th Live dance performance by Michael Klien and members of the former Daghdha Dance Company, in the upper gallery of the Crawford Art Gallery, at 3.30pm.
July 16th-22th Video installation Stalactite, at the Beamish and Crawford Brewery on South Main Street.
6—9pm. The Irish premiere of a new work by Dorothy Cross, curated by Rachel Thomas.
Press contact
Victoria Evans T: +353 (0) 21 4907853 victoriamarieevans@gmail.com
Crawford Art Gallery
Emmet Place, Cork
General Opening Hours:
Monday - Saturday 10:00 - 17:00
Thursday 10:00 - 20:00
Sunday Closed
Admission Free