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Sam Douglas / Brendan Earley
dal 14/3/2012 al 28/4/2012
Monday & Tuesday 11am - 5pm Wednesday - Saturday 11am - 7pm Sunday 2 - 5pm

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Rebecca Gale


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Sam Douglas
Brendan Earley



 
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14/3/2012

Sam Douglas / Brendan Earley

Royal Hibernian Academy RHA, Dublin

Over the past few years Sam Douglas has travelled to various mountain ranges: these places have filtered into a recent series of paintings and serve as the starting point for the mapping out of an invented territory. Brendan Earley creates complex landscapes; debatable zones, which can act as warnings of a wrong turn on a road as economic and social tides come in and out.


comunicato stampa

Sam Douglas, Remnants

Over the past few years Sam Douglas has travelled to various mountain ranges - the Himalayas, Caucasus, Atlas and Picos de Europa. These places have filtered into a recent series of paintings and serve as the starting point for the mapping out of an invented territory. The geographical and cultural isolation of such places offers space for escapist reverie, which once returned to the studio is explored through painting processes that attempt to refer to the geology and atmosphere of the mountain landscape. Erosion and sedimentation are present in repeated sanding back, over painting and the pouring of successive layers of varnish and linseed oil to create an often-dense surface and atmosphere that both occludes and vivifies the image. The burial and uncovering of elements within this surface is also suggestive of archaeological activity, with ambiguous forms half sunk in the strata of the paint- cryptic architecture, unnatural outcrops of rock and the remnants of mining and quarrying occur throughout the work.

Sam Douglas has exhibited extensively since graduating from The Royal College of Art, London in 2007 and this March will exhibit a new series of paintings of mountainous landscapes, in the RHA Ashford Gallery.

Other recent exhibitions include, Restless Nature, Group show, Collyer Bristow Gallery, London, 2011 then showed at Newlyn Gallery, Cornwall, 2011, Suddenly I am nowhere, Group show, Studio 1.1, London, 2010, Solo Show, Cross Gallery n.a.g. , Dublin, 2010, Pretty Baa-Lambs, group show, Madder 139, London, 2009, New Artist Gallery, Cross Gallery, Dublin, 2009

180th Annual Exhibition, RHA, Dublin, 2008, N.T Group show, The Red Room, London, 2008, Solo Show, Corn Exchange Gallery, Edinburgh, 2008, A1c Gallery, Group show, Canada, 2008, Catalyst Arts, Group show, Belfast, 2008, Royal Academy Summer show, London, 2007, Royal College of Art Great Exhibition, London, 2007, Contemporary Art projects Winter exhibition, London, 2007, RCA summer Show, London, 2006, Star Gallery, Sussex, 2003.

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Brendan Earley, A Place Between

The liminal, the transitional, this other territory is often given voice in science fiction, for example the ‘Zone’ in Tarkovsky’s film, Stalker, 1979. With this film in mind it’s easy to start seeing the hinterlands of Dublin, those large swathes of land we pass through without much regard, as an untranslated landscape waiting to be read. By and large, these areas are not meant to be seen (never mind mapped), except perhaps as a blur from a car window, or as a backdrop to visiting a mall on a shopping trip. Hinterlands are part of the gravitational field of all our larger urban areas; a transitional space where we build up speed to escape, as we hurry off to the countryside; the distant wilderness.

These places are complex landscapes; debatable zones, which can act as warnings of a wrong turn on a road as economic and social tides come in and out. If parts of remote rural Ireland feel timeless, then these places feel anything but that. This 'in-between' found in these places can also be found in the sculptures I am working on, extending even beyond being between an object and idea, assemblage and the readymade but more towards a state of transcendence. Always on the verge of entropic collapse or jubilant transformation the objects and materials used in recent work, like life, are in a constant state of flux - all be it, one which is marked by a pronounced sense of growth and possibility. From Styrofoam to plasterboard, from plywood to foam, these items point to a shared culture (rather then a unique national identity) giving alternative insights into our contemporary society. The sculptures are composed of both handmade and consumer goods and speak to a state of inbetweenness - one which does not embrace homogeneity and recognises the need to consider contradictions, as Beckett put it, this work demands “to find form that (can) accommodate the mess, that is the task of the artist now”.

While the work constantly makes reference to the outside world, the imagination we bring to everyday objects and common materials is also considered. This place for contemplation and transformation is further framed by the scale of the large drawing for the floor of Gallery I, at the RHA. Over the last number of years, I have been making a body of drawings using markers, which run out during the making of the image. The drawings are built up using short strokes running in horizontal lines, which gradually begin to curve as I work up the page. Partly out of a desire to stop making drawings of buildings these new images give a sense of a large architectural space, further emphasised by their size. The sheer scale of this image would not just compete with the space but would transform the gallery, mapping it in two sheets of paper - A Place Between.

Casting Styrofoam packaging in aluminium, previous work was assembled to suggest fragmented architectural structures, the remains of a destroyed site perhaps, or the early stages of an incomplete project. The current use of materials instils a muted, raw, and awkward presence, calling to mind the aspirations of Brutalist architecture - with its explicit use of inexpensive poured concrete to create housing and public spaces – and ancient architectural ruins. Pieces such as Beneath the Underpass play with objects in transition and through the use of familiar ‘found’ items (Styrofoam cast in aluminium), referencing ruins and buildings, an inventive and empathetic perspective is given on such matters as our current position – how to rebuild.
Brendan Early, 2011.

Brendan Earley, born 1971. Lives and works in Dublin. After graduating from NCAD with first class honours spent a number of years travelling before receiving the Fulbright scholarship to attend Hunter College, New York City. Graduated with a Master in Fine Art in 1999 and returned to Dublin where he exhibits regularly. Exhibitions include Artist Space, New York, Ars Electronica, Austria, Perspective, Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast and FUTURES, RHA Dublin. He was awarded his PhD in 2010 from the National College of Art and Design, Dublin and recently won the Curated Visual Arts Award. His work is in a number of public and private collections and is represented by mother’s tankstation, Dublin.

This exhibition is supported by the Arts Council's Project Grant.

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Image: Brendan Earley, A Place Between, 2011, Felt tipped pen on paper, 500 x 900 cm, Image courtesy of the artist and mother’s tankstation, Dublin.

Press contact: Rebecca Gale rebecca@rhagallery.ie

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IN ARCHIVIO [17]
Six Exhibitions
dal 9/1/2013 al 23/2/2013

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