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A Matter of Life and Death
LYNDA BENGLIS, CHIARA CAMONI, PHOEBE CUMMINGS, LUCIO FONTANA, ANYA GALLACCIO, KEITH HARRISON, PHILLIP KING, SERENA KORDA, LEONCILLO LEONARDI, ANDREW LORD, MAGDALENE ODUNDO, LAWSON OYEKAN, MASAOMI YASUNAGAAn exhibition of works in clay, curated by Jenni Lomax
29 March - 28 May
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Andrew LordCircle of artichokes, 2019ceramic240 x 240 cm.
94 1/2 x 94 1/2 in. -
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Andrew LordCircle of sixteen swallows, 2019ceramic, string, gold-leafed hook, epoxy, gold leaf340 x 340 cm.
134 x 134 in. -
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Phoebe Cummings
Prelude, 2022
clay, wood, steel
200 x 120 x 120 cm.
78 1/2 x 47 1/2 x 47 1/2 in. -
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Chiara CamoniVasi Faralla (#06, #09, #11), 2020
stoneware, glaze with flower ash
dimensions variable
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Chiara Camoni’s Farfalle (butterfly) vases also draw emphasis to the contradictions of nature, contrasting the butterfly’s shimmering allure with its ability to be repellent in order to survive. Her coil-built clay vessels are individually characterised by sculpted reliefs in the form of a moth or butterfly and imbued with the ambiguities of anthropomorphism. There is much camouflage, mirroring and double-take going on, with the objects questioning their own place in the order of things. While they can be seen to function as vases, with flowers and foliage incorporated within their table top display, the objects hold a potent, totemic symbolism, alluding to ritual, folklore and magic.
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Chiara Camoni
Vasi Farfalla (Tante manine, Farfalla fiore, Babolo), 2021
stoneware galzed with flowers' ash, garden's soil, river's sand
dimensions variable
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Serena Korda
And She Cried Me a River, 2021
stoneware, unglazed stoneware, natural hemp rope
dimensions variable
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The firing procedure is always uncertain. The alchemic changes of state happen out of sight; locked in the intense heat of a kiln or buried under red hot embers. For Keith Harrison this unpredictable and perilous process is a vital component of his performance works using clay. He has made a video of a ceramic firing taking place in the living room of his grandmother’s house. Egyptian clay wrapped around the elements of a small, electric bar heater, spits, glows and crackles while his grandmother is heard in the background, asking him if he would like a cup of tea and something to eat. She seems unconcerned of any threat to her safety or to her furnishings. The tense undercurrent that runs through the normality of this domestic scene receives an additional charge when being watched in such close proximity to Vesuvius.
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Keith Harrison
Resistor, 2001
digital copy of DV film
2 minutes 40 seconds
edition of 3 + 2AP
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Magdalene Odundo has said that committing a sculpture to the kiln is the most stressful part of its making. She knows, like Powell and Pressburger’s hero, that it will have to negotiate that uncertain space between Heaven and Earth and hopes that the heat’s force will provide the means of survival rather than destruction. Shaped by pulling from the central core of the clay and working from the inside out, Odundo’s hollowed forms are visually animated by the containment of air. They seem to inhale and exhale, effecting an illusion of movement on their burnished, oxidated and blackened surfaces - the implied motion is transmittable, inviting a physical response in a reciprocal intake of breath. Her sculptures exist constantly in the present, though it is evident that past lives, knowledge, and long-held beliefs are implicated in both concept and process. This fluid collapsing of time resonates strongly in a city where the sacred blood of its patron saint, San Gennaro, changes state from dust to liquid when fate bodes well.
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Lawson Oyekan
Reciprocity 5x/5, 2017
porcelain
35 x 18 x 17 cm. each
14 x 7 1/2 x 6 1/2 in. -
Lawson Oyekan, at times, incorporates text within his ceramic pieces. Written in English or the language of his parents, Yoruba, the poetic words fuse with the bodily forms in an expression of humanity’s endurance in the face of despair. His pair of tall, standing structures speak to each other of their similarities and differences. Piercings and holes created by overlapping strips of clay adorn Oyekan’s work, liberating the air and allowing the energy to flow freely - back and forth, inside and out.
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Phillip King released the swollen, off-balance tension of his sculptures by cutting into them and breaking their wholeness. Despite these wounds the ‘vessels’ retain their poise and assume a human stance of vulnerability and resistance. There is an aura of conflict and warrior-like combativeness in King’s ceramic sculptures. In a similar but different way to Masaomi Yasunaga, he compromises the stability and purpose of a vessel by challenging the probability of its base materials. Mixing pulped paper with raw clay is a perilous enough endeavour but it is a risk compounded by making shape-changing penetrations through all sides of the vessels.
In defiance of potential disaster, King’s sculptures adopt classical postures of stoical resistance. Perhaps this sense of endurance is because their unglazed clay ‘bodies’ have the appearance of Portland stone.
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Phillip King
Head, 1996
ceramic
50 x 45 x 45 cm.
19 3/4 x 17 3/4 x 17 3/4 in.
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In contrast, Lynda Benglis’s extruded clay objects are in futuristic flight. Full of glossy fluidness, their gestural swirls illustrate the mechanical force by which they were formed. The works have a definite direction of travel that is held suspended in mid-air - like speed lines in a cartoon animation, drawn to imply that anything might happen next.
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The sense of nascent danger that seems integral to the ceramic works of all these artists is inevitable, given their resilience has been constantly tested by fate and circumstance. It is a feeling heightened by their temporary relocation. In a place whose vibrancy and historic beauty exists despite - and because - of its proximity to an active volcano and a volatile ocean: a city in which people go about their daily tasks and pleasures, walking above catacombs that have skulls and bones of their forebears on open display; where the souls of the recently deceased are prayed for and celebrated on every street corner – here everything is a matter of life and death.
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For exhibition enquiries please contact Federica Sheehan: federica@thomasdanegallery.com
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