The Fruitmarket Gallery
Edinburgh
45 Market Street
0131 2252383 FAX 0131 2203130
WEB
Christine Borland
dal 1/12/2006 al 27/1/2007
mon-sat 11am - 6 pm; sun 12 - 15 pm

Segnalato da

Louise Anderson


approfondimenti

Christine Borland



 
calendario eventi  :: 




1/12/2006

Christine Borland

The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh

The exhibition brings together a selection of existing, recent, and newly commissioned artwork, offering an opportunity to trace the development of Borland's ideas across the range of her sculptural practice. She deals with the body, and with our emotional, imaginative, medical and historical sense of self.


comunicato stampa

Solo show

Christine Borland makes art which deals with the body, and with our emotional, imaginative, medical and historical sense of self. Her practice is hugely varied, yet it is united by a number of constants. Chief among these is an insistent interrogation of objects and situations which shed light on the junction between the fact of the body and the more imaginative or conceptual construct of the self: the mechanics and the mystery of human existence. The kind of objects with which Borland works tend to be those with a close practical, imaginative or symbolic relationship to the human body. Shoes, blankets, slippers, crockery, bones and cell cultures have all featured in her work, as have objects with more elliptical associations, such as diamonds, birds, guns, apples, watermelons, leaves, plants and trees. Borland’s exhibition at The Fruitmarket Gallery opens with a series of sculptures examining the frailty of the human condition through the fragility of the human body. In the mid 1990s, Borland discovered that it was possible to purchase human skeletons mail order.

Simultaneously fascinated and horrified by this, she made a number of works which seek to honour and recuperate the lost souls whose skeletal remains were acquired through the post. Second Class Male, Second Class Female, 1996 reconstructs in bronze the heads of the last two skulls obtained by the suppliers which the artist used; while Supported, 1990-1999, reclaims a fragile image from a skeleton by tracing its outline in dust on a glass shelf. These works are presented in the context of several others, including Bullet Proof Breath, 2001, a glass representation of human bronchia wound around with spider silk, which offer alternative ways of depicting and imagining the human body.

A sense of human knowledge unites the new work in the exhibition, which takes the natural world as its point of origin. The apple tree that provided Isaac Newton with his revelatory moment, and the plane tree on the island of Kos, under which Hippocrates, the founder of modern medicine, is said to have taught, reverberate through the history of man’s understanding of his place in the world. Borland has worked directly with both trees to make new sculptures for the exhibition, though neither is represented in its actual form. Accentuating the imaginative power of these trees, their position as the natural guardians of human endeavour, Borland summons only their symbolic presence. Ultimately, Christine Borland’s art is concerned with re-visualising that which is no longer there. Finding ways imaginatively to cross back over the line dividing the body from the self - the specimen from the individual - she seeks to recuperate something of the essence of human life.

Opening 2 december 2006

The Fruitmarket Gallery
45 Market Street - Edinburgh
Hours: Mon-sat 11am - 5pm; sun 12am - 5 pm
Free admission

IN ARCHIVIO [59]
Another Minimalism
dal 12/11/2015 al 20/2/2016

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