The artist presents a collection of paintings and montages. These works, located on the ground floor, have been made or adapted, specifically for BALTIC from a series of works Miller has referred to as the Bad Weather paintings. Based on the dust jackets of old Penguin books they are painterly reproductions of these iconic classics but with fictitious titles that are specific to the North East where Miller himself grew up. Using knowledge gained from research for his latest novel Reclaim the Night, Miller has made a series of large paintings based on the billboard information widely disseminated by the West Yorkshire Police to help catch the Yorkshire Ripper in 1978.
Artist and writer Harland Miller presents a collection of paintings and montages at
BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art from Friday 22 May to Sunday 19 July 2009.
These works, located on the ground floor, have been made or adapted, specifically
for BALTIC from a series of works Miller has referred to as the Bad Weather
paintings. Based on the dust jackets of old Penguin books they are painterly
reproductions of these iconic classics but with fictitious titles that are specific
to the North East where Miller himself grew up. In execution these works reference
American abstraction, and German expressionism, which when combined with his writers
love of text, create a feeling of belonging to a tradition of very English pop art.
As such, the resultant work, which hints at the beat up nature of old paperbacks,
evokes a wilful sense of nostalgia within which there are equal measures of the
humour and tragedy innate in the culture of the north: Bridlington - Costal Erosion
- It's Not All Bad News; Yorkshire - It Was A Struggle When Times Were Good and You
Can Rely On Me - I'll Always Let You Down.
Using knowledge gained from research for his latest novel Reclaim the Night, Miller
has made a series of large paintings based on the billboard information widely
disseminated by the West Yorkshire Police to help catch the Yorkshire Ripper in
1978. The police campaign was founded on the belief that hoax letters and tapes sent
to them by Wearside Jack, a North East man, who only recently was identified and
convicted as John Samuel Humble. The poster incorporated samples of the hoaxer's
writings as well as a telephone number to call in order to listen to his voice and a
second number to call if you recognised either.
Some time after the Ripper was caught Miller came across one of these posters - the
resultant decay, exposing other advertisements from that era, left the message
changed, in some ways more poignant. Miller states "I'm not interested in serial
killers per se, but it was like a collage of that whole time which I am interested
in, and, as well as writing about it I always wanted to make some artwork from it
too. I've always liked the weathered look of things, in that way these poster
paintings are like the book paintings too, but more than that there was this faded
poignancy: instead of saying 'Help us stop the Ripper from killing again. West
Yorkshire Police.' it said 'Help us stop killing again. West Yorkshire
Police.'"
Miller achieved critical acclaim with his début novel, Slow Down Arthur, Stick to
Thirty, (2000), the story of a kid who travels around Northern England with a David
Bowie impersonator. In the same year he published a small novella, First I was
Afraid, I was Petrified, based on the true story of a female relative with Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder, discovered when Miller came across a box full of Polaroid
images she had taken of the knobs of a cooker. In 2001 Miller began producing the
series of paintings based of the dust jackets of Penguin books, which are included
in this exhibition. Miller was the Writer in Residence at the ICA, London for 2002
and over the course of his residence he programmed a number of events drawing from
his experience in literature and fine art, which included a season devoted to the
ongoing influence and legacy of Edgar Allen Poe.
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art
Gateshead Quays South Shore Road - Gateshead
Opening hours: Monday - Sunday 10.00 - 18.00 (excluding Tuesday) Tuesday 10.30 - 18.00
Free admission