Painted Cloth: distressing the surface |
MAKE/CREATE event |
The
Crypt Gallery, St Pancras Church, Euston Road, London, NW1
2BA
The city's new annual event will showcase "exceptional craftsmanship through a journey-of-discovery" and will feature hidden workshops and both celebrated and upcoming makers alongside famous shops, galleries and luxury brands.
The spirit of the Griffin Gallery's MAKE/CREATE exhibition "lies in the desire to demonstrate the contemporary nature of craft, and the craft involved in contemporary art – changing perceptions of both" (Griffin Gallery)
Test pieces for the final painted cloth |
Reproduction Elizabethan painted cloth: "Kent Multivine" |
Titled “Veneer” our installation will play on notions of imitation, illusion and deception.
At this stage the components are still coming together as we work from separate studios 100 miles apart (Southampton and Hastings) so for now, here's my perspective.
With Chantal's focus on concepts of truth and illusion, reality and deception, she honed in on similar elements in my Elizabethan work. The wall paintings and painted cloths I reproduce from the 16th and 17th centuries are laden with imitation. Our domestic ancestors covered their walls in aspirational motifs designed to express status, intellect and allegiance. For example the painted cloth below mimics expensive wooden panelling.
Our reproduction Elizabethan painted cloth for Shakespeare's Birthplace, Stratford-upon-Avon |
Original Elizabethan wall painting in Oxford |
And so grew the idea of creating a dramatic painted cloth with historic faux elements and setting it amongst sculptural objects that present us with more falsity: pretend panelling, artificial floorboards, the illusion of aged surfaces and expensive materials.
An exploration of how both then and now we create domestic settings that reflect a reality we aspire to.
Sewing 3 panels of my cloth together to make one big piece |
The installation will be animated by amateur footage of a guided tour of Hearst Castle, William Randolph Hearst's pastiche laden mansion in California. Shoehorned with genuine and reproduction architecture and antiques, this Hollywood fantasy both deceives and beguiles visitors as we hope to do on a smaller scale at The Crypt Gallery in May.
We hope you can make it to MAKE/CREATE for a show that promises some intriguing collaborations between artists and craftsmen.
We can't wait to see what our fellow collaborators have been working on too.
Map of Crypt Gallery near St Pancras Station, London |
1 comment:
Why can't I teleport over to London? This will be absolutely amazing. It sounds right up my alley. Cannot wait to see some pictures.
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