An Experiment of Unusual Opportunity - Everybody's Got a Little Light Under the Door. The pulpy ephemera Gallagher selects as support for her paintings and drawings - lined penmanship paper, magazine pages, journals, advertisements - are all subjected to her process of transformation. Only traces of their past life remain, like forensic evidence, the precise measure and significance of which remains unclear.
In Ellen Gallagher's exhibition we witness a collapse of time. Fictional and non-fictional characters are merged and reanimated in this new body of works which disrupt our sense of the here and now.
The pulpy ephemera Gallagher selects as support for her paintings and drawings - lined penmanship paper, magazine pages, journals, advertisements - are all subjected to her process of transformation. Only traces of their past life remain, like forensic evidence, the precise measure and significance of which remains unclear. This state of "un-knowing" fascinates Gallagher and is one of the primary themes in her work. The inky saturation, smudges, staining, perforations, punctures, spills, abrasions, printed lettering and marking constitute an evocative testament to the grip of time.
Encountering Gallagher's work at close range is akin to charting unfamiliar territory or ruins. As we navigate between legibility and blankness, corporal features surface out of a sea of abstracted forms. Protagonists recur in various guises, and in 'An Experiment Of Unusual Opportunity', 2008, a medical report of the Tuskegee Experiment figures as a macabre landscape. A dark brooding configuration unfolds from an ink-stained ground. Fragmentation, cutting, collage and juxtapositions facilitate the meeting of incompatible narratives: fact and fiction merge in a vortex. The silhouetted figures against a bold, geometric gold ground in 'IGBT', 2008, serve to deny any pictorial illusion, as do the flat fields of colour and grid-like compositional structure of untitled, 1996, an early painting included in the show.
Gallagher's process is one of accumulation and obliteration: her marks intrude and break out over or under surfaces. In this exhibition her process bleeds out from the picture plane to claim the upper walls of the gallery space through a frieze of penmanship paper, heightening our sense of immersion in the mutable realm Gallagher has created.
29|4|2009
7-8.30PM £5/3.50
Discussion
Amna Malek, Professor of Art History at the Slade School of Art, and Claire Doherty, Director of Situations, discuss the work of Ellen Gallagher.
Image: IGBT, 2008
Press contact
Ben Cove, Marketing & Communications Intern 020 77036120 press@southlondongallery.org
Tamarisk Saunders-Davies, Press Officer tamarisk@southlondongallery.org
The South London Gallery
65 Peckham Road
London SE5 8UH
Opening times
Tuesday–Sunday 12–6pm
Closed Monday