Exhibition
Luke Burton. Westminster Coastal
8 Feb 2024 – 2 Mar 2024
Regular hours
- Thursday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Friday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Saturday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Tuesday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Wednesday
- 12:00 – 18:00
Address
- Unit BGC, Bussey Building
- 133 Rye Lane
- London
England - SE15 4ST
- United Kingdom
Luke Burton’s fourth solo exhibition at the gallery, Westminster Coastal, delves into the intersection of politics, personal narratives, and cultural symbolism, and questions the role of art in political discourse.
About
An installation of stacked office furniture, paintings and vitreous enamels combine to suggest an ambiguous department of the Civil Service.At the heart of Westminster Coastal are two large paintings. These works combine seemingly disparate imagery from Westminster’s multifaceted identity: an ancient archaeological site, a symbol of government power, and a patchwork of neighbourhoods. The paintings subtly integrate portraits of civil servants, blending official imagery with personal moments of crisis, such as Sir Philip Rutnam’s resignation speech. Oversized chandelier droplets morph into something more brutal, while Celtic artefacts double as decorative and warlike objects. Burton’s exhibition is a narrative of Westminster’s history of violence seen through a decorative lens, with this duality of lightness and historical gravity creating an ambivalence throughout the work.
Crosswords serve as a metaphor for the relationship between language and art, blending abstract, geometric, and decorative forms to communicate a coded visual language. This interplay is a pivotal aspect of Burton’s work, resonating with a style that oscillates between realism and mannerism. In the exhibition, lustrous vitreous enamel sculptures are displayed as archaeological artefacts within a crush of abandoned office furniture. These enamels are reminiscent of heraldry, alluding symbolically to gestures of power and violence, whilst in their Byzantine ‘costume’ hinting at Westminster’s mediaeval history. On closer inspection, they are found to be resting on a range of food and packaging, from miniature Twiglet plinths to the inside of bejewelled Monster Munch packets. These theatrical combinations of references suggest an uncertain scene – part archaeological dig, part Civil Service office, part gallery space.