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DAISY
ADDISON Podium
& Pandemonium |
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Adam King explains that his practice appropriates and reconfigures the detritus and stuff of urban consumerism in order to create assemblages and collage-compositions which reference the post-apocalyptic, pastoral, macabre and otherworldly. Re-using materials and objects collected from skips, thrift and charity shops alongside brand new products, these “exotic cosmologies” are extravagant panoramas conveying an ambiguous identity. Transformed and altered through the act of cutting, spray painting, mark making, decorating and sewing, King sees his works as “viral works growing and developing organically”. The artist is inspired by a wide range of sources including historical landscape painting, textile design, recent American collage, ethnography, curiosity cabinets and books and manuals relating to scientific discovery and the natural world. Exploring official forms of the baroque statuary and other conventional portraits “in memory of”, Rebecca Stevenson presents her sculptures as corrupted objects in a baroque spectacle. Endued with obsessive even fetishist decorative qualities, her works play incommensurably and with delight and enjoyment with ideas of supreme beauty and its inescapable grotesque aspect. The impulse to decorate is seen in her practice as an acting-out of desire that supplants the object's original form and meaning. Extending past the visual, sculptures engage on a visceral or sensual level, the sugary surfaces and succulent waxy fruits provoking the desire to taste or touch the work. The works are compelling in their ability to build desire from repulsion.
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Daisy
Addison lives and works in London. Recent exhibitions include Our
friendship has great potential, Acquire Arts (2009); Flags Session
2, Am Nuden Da (2009); Royal college Interim Show (2008); The Casper
Erasmus School of Art, The Hex Gallery, London (2007); Chelsea Degree
Show (2007); Materiality, Ada Street Gallery, London (2007); Trinity
Buoy Warf, London (2006); St Pancras Crypt, London (2006); Trinity
Buoy Warf, London (2005).
Adam King was born in Norfolk and lives and works in London. Recent exhibitions include Beyond Pattern, Oriel Davies & Tour (2009-10); Journey to the Center of the Earth, 20/21 Visual Arts, Scunthorpe (2009); Pandamonium, Selfridges, Oxford Str., London (2009); Ambivalent Landscape, Monica Bobinska Gallery, London (Solo) (2008); Macabre Masterpiece of terror, Monica Bobinska; Brief replies: Site Specific Installations, New York (2008); Cosmopolis: Adam King and Yutaka Inagawa, Houldsworth Gallery (2008); Distant Echo Wilderness, Lounge Gallery, London (Solo) (2007); Prairie, Contemporary Art Project, London (Solo) (2006). Rebecca Stevenson lives and works in London. Recent exhibitions include Old Masters Reinterpreted, Rollo Contemporary Art, London (2009); Moments in Macabre, Bo Lee, Bath (2009); Gods and Mortals, Chelsea College of Art & Design, London (2009); Go For It!, (Olbrecht Collection), Weserburg Museum, Bremen (2008-09); Tempting Nature, Mogadishni, Copenhagen (Solo) (2008); Future 50 PSL, Leeds (2008); Whispers of Immortality, Natalia Goldin, Stockholm (2008); The Clearing, NETTIE HORN, London (2008); These Living Walls of Jet, Ceri Hand, Liverpool (2008); Innocents, Mogadishni, Copenhagen (Solo) (2007).
In foreground:
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![]() © NETTIE HORN |