The Blue Gallery
London
15 Great Sutton Street
+44 020 74905749 FAX +44 020 74905749
WEB
Emily Allchurch
dal 30/11/2004 al 29/1/2005
+44 020 74903833 FAX +44 020 74905749
WEB
Segnalato da

The Blue Gallery


approfondimenti

Emily Allchurch



 
calendario eventi  :: 




30/11/2004

Emily Allchurch

The Blue Gallery, London

For this current body of work, the artist has selected a number of paintings by European masters that will be familiar to many, work by artists as Giorgione, Claude, Friedrich and Turner. She then carefully reconstructs them in a contemporary idiom, but each now entirely composed of often hundreds of photographs taken around south and east London. Allchurch has completed 10 large format images which constitute the exhibition.


comunicato stampa

Recent work

The Directors of the Blue Gallery are proud to announce the first solo exhibition in London of the work of Emily Allchurch. The first works from the Settings series were unveiled at Photo-London and elicited great excitement from critics and public alike. Allchurch has now completed 10 large format images which will constitute the exhibition.

For this current body of work, Allchurch has selected a number of paintings by European masters that will be familiar to many, work by artists as diverse as Giorgione, Claude, Friedrich and Turner. She then carefully reconstructs them in a contemporary idiom, but each now entirely composed of often hundreds of photographs taken around south and east London. For example, Setting II (after Canaletto) exchanges the buildings along the Grand Canal in 18th century Venice with others tracked down in Mile End, Shoreditch and Limehouse. Similarly, locations across Crystal Palace, West Norwood, Brixton and Peckham were sourced for Tempest (after Giorgione) and Outlook (after Claude). These images are digitally spliced to create a seamless collage and presented as large backlit transparencies, accentuating the dramatic allusion of the pieces. In these contemporary versions, the original protagonists have been removed, shifting the focus to the background setting. They are now suggestive of theatrical backdrops or film sets, anticipating an event or perhaps recording its aftermath. What remains, however, are the residual traces of a narrative; graffiti, discarded beer cans, rubbish left after a summer picnic, road works, for sale signs etc.

The streetscapes of east and southeast London where I live are the subject of my work. I am fascinated by the hybrid of architectural styles and influence in these areas of deprivation and urban regeneration. Far from the tourist trail can be found Georgian and Victorian houses with their classical proportions and decorative motifs in varying levels of decay, fighting for attention alongside shiny new examples of contemporary urban design. The aim of my work is to breathe new life and energy into the forgotten and overlooked in these areas by uprooting specific buildings and street furniture from their everyday surroundings and creating a new setting for them to exist in, more worthy of their classical aspirations. By elevating their status in this way they are offered a new life of artificial romanticism, which realises both a connection and a sense of dislocation between a classical ideal and the deprived landscapes of London.

In the gallery's Project Space, there will be a concurrent exhibition by Dutch artist Wido Blokland, entitled Scintilla animae.

The gallery is open
Monday - Friday 10am - 6pm
Saturday 11am - 3pm
Tube: Farringdon, Barbican

Image:Emily Allchurch, An Altered View (No. 3)
Transparency On Light Box (90 x 71.2 x 12 cms) 2001

The Blue Gallery
15 Great Sutton Street London

IN ARCHIVIO [12]
Tim Simmons
dal 29/11/2005 al 27/1/2006

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede