Exhibition

Paula García Stone. Impostors

14 Nov 2019 – 12 Jan 2020

Regular hours

Thursday
00:00 – 23:30
Friday
00:00 – 23:30
Saturday
00:00 – 23:30
Sunday
00:00 – 23:30
Monday
00:00 – 23:30
Tuesday
00:00 – 23:30
Wednesday
00:00 – 23:30

Save Event: Paula García Stone. Impostors6

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m2 Gallery

London, United Kingdom

Address

Travel Information

  • No. 12 to Peckham. Then walk 5mins east along Queens Road. No. 36, 436 or 171 to Queens Road Peckham station from Victoria through Oval. No. 53 or 453 from Oxford Circus via Elephant & Castle. Get off at 'Toys R Us' on the Old Kent Road. 7mins walk
  • 6 an hour from London Bridge to Queens Road Peckham (7mins). Also 10 past and 40 minutes past the hour from Victoria, London Bridge train (17mins).
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About

“I have called this exhibition’ Impostors’ because each duratrans contains a photographed object that is not what it appears to be within the context of the image. The work titled ‘Impostor’ contains an image of a sugar crystal magnified 697 times posing as an insulin crystal, at least in my mind. We are in an age when our view of ‘the figure’ in art is being expanded and reshaped by science and technology.

I have always liked what the m2 Gallery does, and visit often on my walks. Because of the setting, the art works seem to look out at you, the passer by, then you look in and engage without entering the space physically, allowing the viewer their own place when relating to the work.

My Lightbox images, which span over some years, are mostly called ‘Ventana’ (‘Window’ in Spanish) because of the window quality. Composed using medical photography, X-rays, ESEM (Environmental Scanning Electron Micrograph) images, of up to 4000 times magnification, and macro photographs, they are a view into the unseen inner structure of the visceral body metaphorically aligned with organic forms. They could be the body in the landscape. I think of them as (objective) self-portraits, especially as all of my work involves the human self, which is also present in its absence. In this very particular setting they become portals to enter into with the imagination.

I divide my creative output between sound pieces and my visual works, as well as the daily demands of living with Type 1 Diabetes. I work small with the physical visual pieces, and like the fact that sound can go out into a big space. Although seemingly quite different, the focus in my sound compositions continues to be based on the human experience, sometimes of dis-ease, though less explicitly. I have also returned to drawing. I intend to carry on working with traditional methods and technology together.”

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