Thursday 15 November 2012

Behold

 Behold - An exhibition by Kiki Smith




This exhibition blew me away. Below is her artist statement which talks about her influences. So much of it resonates for me and the work itself is really very beautiful and exudes enchantment and fascination. Again the images here don't do the work justice. You just can't see the detail and texture from the photos. I stood for a long time just studying the surfaces.

The exhibition features sculpture, bronze wall reliefs, stained glass, porcelain figures and tapestry.

"Since the early 1980s, Smith has 'used the body as metaphor, drawing upon myth, spirituality and narrative to consider the human condition, its strengths and its frailties'. Smith's work has been concerned with the interdependence of the natural world; her exhibitions and installations express the vitality of an animistic, spiritually charged universe.

Smith's imagery shows the fundemental elements of life; humans in their diversity; animals, birds and other reptiles; flora and fauna; geology and the elements; as well as the firmament with its suns and moons and stars, all in generative and destructive harmony. She creates an idiosynchratic cosmology.

Kiki Smith's work draws upon vast manifestations of creativity throughout history, including Byzantine icons, medieval tapestries and 1930s Hollywood, ancient Greek simplified sculptural female figures known as Korai, and film techniques such as jump-cuts, pixelation and storyboards. The idea of film frames, with their slight, almost uncanny reconfigurations over time, serves as another point of reference for Smith. 

This exhibition explores Smith's interest in narrative and storytelling through sequencing, and the mysteries that inhabit the imaginary and literal space between works. A major theme within the exhibition emerges from the number of works that closely interrelate with or echo each other. Smith is responding to her interest in doubling and sequential repetition, for, as Smith has commented herself "I think there's a spiritual power in repetition, a devotional quality"." (Timothy Taylor Gallery)


 'Guide' Jacquard Tapestry


'Back Porch Wispering' Cast Aluminium with Gold Leaf


 'Nurse Log & Bough' Bronze


'Blue Moon 2' Bronze






Photos by Timothy Taylor Gallery