Kissell's paintings explore the distance between the desire for perfection and an Utopian existence. Soden's photographs capture a unique vantage point into forgotten buildings and reflect the truly transformative nature of time.
Between the idea, and the reality, between the motion, and the act, falls the shadow” -T.S. Eliot
Eleven is pleased to present new work by painter Natasha Kissell and photographer Gina Soden in Falls the Shadow. Both artists investigate the passing of time and evanescence of architecture.
Kissell’s paintings explore the distance between the desire for perfection and an Utopian existence and the reality of decay and mortality. Visions of architectural splendour strive for eternal presence in the landscapes they occupy but are surrounded by signifiers of their transience in this world, such as crumbling walls, vandalised architecture or clapped-out old cars overgrown with weeds. Her painting Falls the Shadow (2015) highlights this contrast as an idyllic modernist dwelling sits nestled in a clearing while a debased wall serves as a vestige of another building which has been ravaged by time. The paintings examine the human longing to leave a mark on this world, yet this desire for transcendence can never be fulfilled as bricks and mortar are subject to the elements and will ultimately fall away.
Soden’s photographs capture a unique vantage point into forgotten buildings and reflect the truly transformative nature of time. Her latest photographs were captured in abandoned palaces from across Europe. Her images reflect different architectural styles from intimate private devotional spaces to greater architectural displays of power and grandeur. The series echoes the influential political, social, cultural and religious developments and consequential declines from the last two centuries. Wooden Chapel (2014) reveals the architectural skeleton of a derelict chapel in Poland and many of its original features have been repurposed by the local community. Despite the stripped down nature of the chapel there still remains the unique architectural characteristics of the structure and a haunting mystical space created within it.
Soden carefully coordinates each trip and entry in order to gain often unlicensed access to these deserted buildings. The photographs reflects a journey, referring both to the physical demands of gaining entry and to the lapse of time which is manifested in each location. Both Soden and Kissell’s works reveal the impermanence of even the most stunning and sturdy of structures and the fragility of nature in the world in which we live.
Natasha Kissell was born in 1978 and lives in Brighton. Her work is in the collections of, amongst others, HSBC, Deutsche Bank, the Saatchi Collection, the Ovitz Family Collection and Knoxville Museum of Art, Tennessee. Her work was featured in No New Thing Under the Sun at the Royal Academy in 2010. She was also included in the exhibition Painting the Glass House: Artists Revisit Modern Architecture in 2008 and 2009 at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Connecticut, Yale School of Architecture Gallery, and Mills College Art Museum in California.
Gina Soden was born in 1985 and lives and works in London. She was awarded the Naylor Award for the Finest Photograph (2014) and Emerging Artist of the Year (2013) in the National Open Art Competition. She was a finalist in The Holt Art Prize (2010) Soden was awarded photograph of the year by the Royal Windsor Photographic Society (2012). Her work has been featured in solo exhibitions in the UK and group exhibitions at The Fine Art Society and The Groucho Club, London and Cat Street Gallery, Hong Kong.
Image: Gina Soden, Wooden Chapel 2014, C type print on Baryta Fine Art paper, 88x123cm
Press Contact:
Susannah Haworth on +44 (0)20 7823 5540 or on susannah@elevenfineart.com
Openig: Friday 20 March 2015
Eleven
11 Eccleston Street
Tue - Fri 11am to 6pm, Sat 11am to 4pm