Exhibition
Taking Shape: Sculpture on the Verge
1 Oct 2015 – 4 Oct 2015
Event times
11:00 - 18:00
Cost of entry
Free
45 Gransden Avenue
Address
- 45 Gransden Avenue
- London
- E8 3QA
- United Kingdom
This exhibition presses pause to present sculptural works to both consider the conditions of their own (im)possibility and the promise of their potential.
About
The artists selected for PSC’s Autumn residency, Byzantia Harlow, David Rickard, Emily Motto, Jamie Fitzpatrick, Matthew de Kersaint Giraudeau and Revital & Tuur, will exhibit works during this four-day exhibition that anticipate the projects they will be developing over the residency period, which runs from October to December 2015.
The exhibition celebrates alternatives to the ‘just-in-time production’ that is running roughshod over contemporary work and life. What are the alternatives to this frenetic cycle of make-ship-repeat? To what extent is there still demand for gradual innovation and slow specialisation: obsessive depth instead of spreading breadth? What are the possibilities of bucking the pancake flatness that threatens to suffocate us with its dull genericism? This exhibition will explore these and other topical issues with the express purpose of insisting on an alternative approach to sculptural production, one that traces progressive understanding as it iterates across a practitioner’s artworks, accumulating through their practice.
The exhibition considers sculpture as a dynamic process that takes shape in material form and is then made meaningful through its encounter. This is energised by the history and ambition of the art form’s particular questions, comments and concerns. Taking Shape will foreground these by way of an ‘enquiry on the move’. This will celebrates sculpture as it evolves and is recontextualised through the respective practices of the seven participating artists and their work together as a cohort-in-residence.
Notably, Pangaea Sculptors’ Centre chose not artworks but artists for this exhibition and set them a shared task: to each re-present and/or reconfigure a recent three-dimensional artwork so that it draws attention to the conditions of its own (im)possibility —the terms of its current existence and promise of its potential as it foregrounds what will be produced during the residency. The works on display present an opportunity to think carefully about the role of sculpture today, especially its potential for thoughtful transformation as an antidote to just-in-time production.