GALERIA LEME, SAO PAULO
BRAZILIAN BRITISH CENTRE GALLERIES
THE HIGH LINE, NEW YORK
HALES GALLERY, LONDON
TEMPLE BAR GALLERY, DUBLIN
GALERIA LEME, SAO PAULO
BRITISH MUSEUM , LONDON
HALES GALLERY, LONDON
ROEBLING HALL GALLERY, NEW YORK
VON LINTEL GALLERY, NEW YORK
MARCEL SITCOSKE GALLERY, SAN FRANCISCO
COURTAULD INSTITUTE OF ART, LONDON
Richard Galpin Elevation |
|
|
“Hornstrumpet! We shall not have succeeded in demolishing everything unless we demolish the ruins as well. But the only way I can see of doing that is to use them to put up a lot of fine, well-designed buildings.” |
|
This exhibition shows the latest development of Galpin’s unique working process (that of cutting away with a scalpel at the surface emulsion of his own photographs). Here Galpin subjects his photographs of London and New York to a cubo-futurist vocabulary influenced by the early 20th century wartime studies of British artists Edward Wadsworth, C. R. W. Nevinson, and Graham Sutherland. Through combining this aesthetic with the reflective surfaces of contemporary cities, the works have manifested a shard-like angularity, reminiscent of science-fiction illustration, the architectural drawings of Lebbus woods, or the sculptures of Lee Bondecou. The anonymous utopian landscapes of Galpin’s previous works have given way to something more dystopian and post-apocalyptic. These are future ruins, or perhaps rogue states built from the detritus of 21st century life.
Elevation I, 2008/9, peeled photograph, 51x61cm (right) |
|
| For the first time in Galpin’s work, we see the artist imposing a geometric form from which to structure the selection and removal of photographic information. The use of a diamond, circle or ellipse as a central axis creates a visual push and pull between the flatness of the incised form, and the lens perspective of the photograph. This projection of geometry into the space of the photograph results in a complex interplay of perspectives and dimensions. Galpin says: “My aim is always to get the works to function both as a representation of the ‘real’ world (albeit severely restricted), and a fabricated alternative reality - to get both these elements to coexist simultaneously within the work. Or, at the very least, for the viewer to feel that these dual dimensions are just beyond reach.
Distructure I, 2008/9, peeled photograph, 77x95cm |
|
| Richard Galpin’s most recent solo exhibition was Tetratopia at Franklin Art Works, Minneapolis (2008). His work has been included in When it's a Photograph, at Bolsky Gallery, Otis College, LA (2008), Under Erasure, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin, Ireland (2008), Constructed Realities - Stretching the Truth, John Michael Kohler Art Center, Wisconsin, USA (2008), and Prints and Drawings: Recent Acquisitions, The British Museum, London (2007). Galpin is included in the collections of the British Museum, British Government Art Collection, Deutsche Bank and various private collections in the UK, Europe, North and South America.
*Jarry, Alfred, Ubu Enchaîné, in Œuvres complètes, tome 1, Gallimard, Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, Paris, 1972. p427. Quoted in Therapeutic Urbanism? by Ayssar Arida & Michael Stanton, 2003. |
|
| Hales Gallery 7 Bethnal Green Road, London E1 6LA +44 (0)20 7033 1938 info@halesgallery.com www.halesgallery.com Opening Times: Wednesday to Saturday, 11am to 6pm, or by appointment. ![]() |
|