Futures, Series 3, Episode 2

Friday 16 November – Wednesday 19 December 2018
Marcel Vidal, Silverfish, The Dock Arts Center, Leitrim, 2018, Paint, faux grass, metal, feathers, wool, paint, expanded polystyrene, zinc fittings, watercolours on, paper, oil on linen, Photography by Lee Welch, Image courtesy of the artist. | Futures, Series 3, Episode 2 | Friday 16 November – Wednesday 19 December 2018 | Royal Hibernian Academy

This exhibition is the second in the third series of Futures, a sequence of exhibitions that endeavours to document and contextualise the work of early career artists, around who exists a growing critical and curatorial consensus.

The artists in Futures, Series 3, Episode 2 are selected from various artist-led initiatives, group shows and over a series of studio visits undertaken in the last 18 months by Patrick T. Murphy, RHA Director and Ruth Carroll, Curator.

The artists chosen for this year’s Futures exhibition are; Bassam Al-Sabah, Cecilia Danell, Laura Fitzgerald, Jennifer Mehigan, Joanne Reid and Marcel Vidal.

Bassam Al-Sabah’s work aims to convey visions of war, resistance and perseverance. He utilises multi-media installation comprising of video, painting, sculpture and printed matter. The work is concerned with how the past is continually revised to meet the present when the juvenile fantasy breaks down into the reality of adulthood.

Cecilia Danell’s current body of paintings is based on winter walks in the area surrounding her family farm in Sweden, where the experience of being in the landscape influences the paintings beyond the photographic source material. Foregoing the picturesque for the partial and askew, there is an appearance of melting of the landscape, suggesting an existential undoing, as well as an ongoing exploration into the possibilities of the medium of paint.

While often operating within a humorous lens, Laura Fitzgerald’s work points to problematic and absurd aspects in complex political and personal situations. Her work contains woven narratives which exist between real, imagined and rumoured states. The work examines ideas around occupation, labour, rumour, stillness, inertia and waiting. She poses several questions around ethics and inappropriateness, regarding what is deemed legitimate or downright out of order, in terms of art making and the life of an artist.

Joanne Reid’s sculptural practice is rooted in a fascination with material culture. Her work often begins as a direct response to chance encounters with the materials, objects and spaces that form our built environment. Reid works with both discarded and new material, reflecting her interest in the life cycle of objects.

There is an element of surrealism to Jennifer Mehigan‘s work that allows for simulations of wedding cake to exist alongside necrotic human tissue, emeralds, and lava. Fragmented narratives and mythologies perform a type of queer illegibility that recognizes its own participation in an image economy but remains slippery enough to avoid being co-opted too enthusiastically.

Marcel Vidal works intuitively with a variety of materials, constructing distinctive sculptures, that often stage and frame his paintings. His volatile assemblages are built from hardware materials, strips of wood, zinc plated bolts, castor wheels, spray paint, expanding polyurethane foam, string, feathers, fur pelts, deer hooves and suggest a function. These processes produce objects that create a dichotomy between what the seemingly gentle aesthetic of the paintings convey versus the visceral and brutal aesthetic of the sculptures.

www.bassamalsabah.com

www.ceciliadanell.com

www.laurafitzgeraldfrominch.com

www.instagram.com/working_for_jojo

www.jennifermehigan.com

www.marcelvidal.ie

Image: Marcel Vidal, Silverfish, The Dock Arts Center, Leitrim, 2018, Paint, faux grass, metal, feathers, wool, paint, expanded polystyrene, zinc fittings, watercolours on, paper, oil on linen, Photography by Lee Welch, Image courtesy of the artist.
Friday 16 November – Wednesday 19 December 2018
Royal Hibernian Academy
15 Ely Place, Dublin 2
Telephone: +353 1 661 2558
info@rhagallery.ie
www.royalhibernianacade...
Opening hours / start times:
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Tuesday 11:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 11:00 - 19:00
Thursday 11:00 - 19:00
Friday 11:00 - 19:00
Saturday 11:00 - 19:00
Sunday 14:00 - 17:00
Admission / price: Free

 
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