An artist whose practice spans video installation, photography and short film, Wallworth describes her intention as "bringing together technological advances and ancient understandings, new media and old practices, electronics and the electricity of human touch".
Three immersive installation
Australian born artist Lynette Wallworth presents three immersive installation works
in her first UK solo exhibition. An artist whose practice spans video installation,
photography and short film, Wallworth describes her intention as "bringing together
technological advances and ancient understandings, new media and old practices,
electronics and the electricity of human touch."
Wallworth's work is about the relationship between ourselves and nature, about how
we are made up of our physical and biological environments, even as we re-make the
world through our activities. Produced by Forma, this exhibition presents a series
of immersive installation environments that offer tactile gateways for the viewer.
Damavand Mountain is an elegant and simple video installation based on imagery
filmed by Wallworth during an artist’s residency in Iran in 2004. A series of
images track the cycle of a short lived poppy flower, a woman and a snow covered
mountain. The movements of the flower’s petals, the woman’s chador and the clouds
suggest the impact of invisible forces that shape them daily. Their adjustments to
the changing environment evoke a sense of endurance – in human nature and nature
itself. Through this series of visual metaphors Damavand Mountain presents a poetic
and unobtrusive exploration of the global and governmental forces that shape the
lives of those in Iran and around the world.
In Hold: Vessel 1, 2001 the visitor is invited to carry a glass bowl into a darkened
space and encouraged to ‘catch’ projected images of underwater life in the bowl.
The work explores the immensity of the natural world and our relationship to it.
With intimate moments of synchronised light and sound, Hold: Vessel 1, 2001
celebrates minutiae - the microscopic forms of life. Offering a sensation akin to
holding life in your hands, the work creates a sense of communal participation as
visitors pass the bowl to each other, leaving them with an impression of shared
responsibility and hope.
The gently interactive video installation Invisible by Night responds to touch,
presenting a projection of a life–sized woman, whose eternal pacing can be quietly
interrupted by the viewer. Commissioned originally for The Melbourne Festival 2004‚
in response to the layered history of the site of Melbourne's first morgue, the
piece explores suffering, the process of grief and loss, and the transient nature of
compassion.
This exhibition follows an Arts Council England International Fellowship Residency
completed by the artist at the National Glass Centre in 2006. Lynette Wallworth is
represented by Forma.
From 9 March – 4 June 2007, Wallworth’s large scale moving image work Evolution of
Fearlessness (2006) is presented as part of Turbulence, the 3rd Auckland Triennial.
http://www.aucklandtriennial.com
National Glass Centre is a contemporary cultural venue. Housed in a spectacular
glass building situated on the banks of the River Wear it is dedicated to offering
its diverse audience an exceptional visitor experience, and promoting the innovative
and creative qualities of glass through its exhibition and education programme,
glass production facilities and visiting artists studios.
Forma is a creative production agency for ambitious, interdisciplinary contemporary
art.
Working closely with artists over extended periods of time, Forma produces, tours
and publishes groundbreaking new projects that seamlessly combine diverse media. Its
extensive international touring programme, delivered in collaboration with major
venues and festivals world-wide, pioneers new hybrid forms of music, visual art,
film, new media, dance, theatre and live art.
Forma is supported by Arts Council England
National Glass Centre
Liberty Way - Sunderland