Jerwood Visual Arts
London
171 Union Street, Bankside (Jerwood Space)
+44 (0)20 7654 0179
WEB
Luke McCreadie
dal 6/9/2015 al 11/12/2015

Segnalato da

Oliver Fuke


approfondimenti

Luke McCreadie



 
calendario eventi  :: 




6/9/2015

Luke McCreadie

Jerwood Visual Arts, London

'Be in the air, but not be air, be in the no air' is comprised of three elements: a series of wall-mounted ceramic shelf sculptures; a large hanging mobile; and a new film work. An investigation into the process of translation.


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Jerwood Visual Arts presents a body of new works by Newcastle-upon-Tyne based artist, Luke McCreadie. 'Be in the air, but not be air, be in the no air', is comprised of three elements: a series of wall-mounted ceramic shelf sculptures; a large hanging mobile; and a new film work. Expanding on his interest in a loss of verbal language, McCreadie’s commission stems from an investigation into the process of translation that takes place when the form and structure of language morphs from immaterial and verbal, into sculptural and material existence.

In the wall mounted ceramic sculptures, McCreadie revisits his longstanding interest in art history and modes of display. Here, the division between gallery furniture and art object are confused. The object and the shelf merge, becoming indivisible from one another. Letters shoot out from the shelf and object as though growing through them. The shelved objects are references to well known, almost ubiquitous, motifs from art history, including Constantin Brancusi’s Bird In Space (1923) and Marcel Duchamp's Fountain (1917). In selecting them, and rendering such objects indistinguishable from the shelves and words, McCreadie addresses the readings, narratives and institutions that come to surround art objects.

The hanging mobile similarly takes its point of departure from a particular moment in art history. McCreadie utilizes the shapes and colours of Modernist sculpture alongside recognisable symbols often used in notes and diagrams. The arrows, ellipses and stars neither point to, nor mark, anything. In this 3D sketch, stripped of all content, the symbols ordinarily used to highlight or aid understanding endlessly rotate, suggesting a sense of contingency and lack of stability.

McCreadie’s fragmentary film follows a group of characters who embark upon a pilgrimage to an old and obscure library. This library has no system of order, no catalogue or index. Instead, it simply contains piles of dangerously stacked books and notes. Here, as with the works above, McCreadie is set on questioning how an order is given to a mass of historical material. The film also uses traditional techniques of explanation in film as its material, aerial shots used to give an overview of a whole story, mixed with perpendicular shots which describe in detail particular parts of that whole story. This tension between the part and the whole, the known and the unknown, the ordered and chaotic, the word and the image, are central to all the works on display.

Image: Luke McCreadie, 'Plan for Untitled (mobile)', 2015. Courtesy the artist.

Press Contact:
Oliver Fuke, oliver.fuke@jerwoodspace.co.uk
T: 020 7654 0179

Opening: Monday 7 September 2015

Jerwood Visual Arts
171 Union Street, Jerwood Space, London
Mon - Fri 10am to 5pm, Sat - Sun 10am to 3pm

IN ARCHIVIO [5]
Jerwood Drawing Prize 2015
dal 15/9/2015 al 24/10/2015

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