Camden Arts Centre
London
Arkwright Road
+44 020 74725500 FAX +44 020 74725501
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Shelagh Wakely
dal 11/7/2014 al 27/9/2014
tue-sun 10am-6pm, wed 10am-9pm

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Alison Wright


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Shelagh Wakely



 
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11/7/2014

Shelagh Wakely

Camden Arts Centre, London

A View from a Window. Across all the galleries and the garden, the exhibition brings together works spanning the breadth of media Wakely worked with, including print, video, unfired clay sculptures, ceramics and exploratory drawings.


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Nature and its ephemeral magic is the focus of a major exhibition of work by influential British artist Shelagh Wakely (1932–2011). Across all the galleries and the garden, the exhibition brings together works spanning the breadth of media Wakely worked with, including print, video, unfired clay sculptures, ceramics and exploratory drawings.

Wakely was a pioneer of installation art – at a time when many of her contemporaries in the UK were making bold, sculptural work, her practice was characterised by a delicate touch, tracing the shifting behaviour of light and observations of nature. Using organic materials inclined to weathering and deterioration, her sculptures conjure a sense of temporality and movement, in which seemingly simple images and forms evoke emotional and sensual experiences. Particular attention is paid to the thresholds between things; vessels, studies of negative space and aromas permeating boundaries between people and objects. Much of the work has been drawn directly from Wakely’s studio, including material experiments, working drawings and found objects, conveying the vitality with which she engaged with the world through making.

Wakely’s creativity was inspired and defined by the time and place where she worked. She spent long periods in Brazil, where she collaborated with artists such as Tunga and Tatiana Grindberg, who have been invited to offer guidance for this exhibition.

In the garden, her work is brought into conversation with artists with whom she shared creative concerns during her lifetime, such as Richard Deacon, Susan Hiller and Alison Wilding. In 1982, Wakely curated an exhibition at Camden Arts Centre, Sculpture in the Garden, which included the work Wilding is recreating. Inspired by Wakely’s own garden in North London and a commission she undertook for St George’s Hospital in Tooting, an area will be devoted to plants with medicinal qualities, such as angelica, caraway, chervil, parsley and anise.

The exhibition has been developed with Wakely’s friend and collaborator, the Brazilian artist, Tunga, along with fellow artists Tatiana Grindberg and Antoni Malinowski and writer Sarah Kent.

The exhibition is supported by The Elephant Trust and The Shelagh Wakely Bequest

With additional thanks to Gustafson Porter LLP

Image: Shelagh Wakely, Curcuma sul travertine, 1991 Loose tumeric powder. Courtesy ROOM Artspace. Photo: Heini Scnheebli

Alison Wright
Press Consultant
+44 (0) 1608 811 474
+44 (0) 7814 796 930
alison@alisonwrightpr.com

Related

Introductory Talk: Sarah Kent and Tunga
12 July 2014

Create a Scene
8 August 2014

Exhibition Talk: Tanya Barson
6 August 2014

Exhibition Talk: Dr. Judith Collins
10 September 2014

An Evening in the Garden
27 August 2014

Talk: Vivien Lovell - Shelagh Wakely and the city
17 September 2014

Dance: Yong Min Cho - Catch the Flowers
24 September 2014

Exhibition Talk: Gina Buenfeld
28 September 2014

Camden Arts Centre
Arkwright Road - London NW3 6DG
Opening times
Tuesday to Sunday 10.00am – 6.00pm
Wednesday 10.00am – 9.00pm
Closed Mondays
Free Entry

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Rose English / Florian Roithmayr
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