The Spiritual Exercises 2 is live!

The Hundred Still 1.jpg
The Hundred Still 2.jpg

The Hundred

A short film by Peter Lewis and Sophy Rickett, made for Mark Dean’s online exhibition, The Spiritual Exercises 2 is now live.

The Spiritual Exercises took place in the spring of 2020, during the first UK lockdown, when in response to an open call 100 artists produced work in isolation.

The Spiritual Exercises 2 invited artists involved in the original project to connect with one other over the course of the second extended lockdown, offering them an online space to present their collaborative work.

View the online exhibition here

Ledger Lines opens at Kestle Barton

Ledger Lines: Abigail Reynolds, Sophy Rickett and Michelle Stuart

Kestle Barton, Helston, Cornwall

27 May - 9 July 2017

This exhibition has been curated in collaboration with Parafin Gallery, London. It brings together work by three artists who explore ideas relating to landscape, history and memory. The three distinct bodies of work included triangulate three West Country sites – Avebury and the Ridgeway, the River Severn and the Penwith Peninsula – which are rich with cultural and historical significance. The works use seemingly objective strategies such as documentary photography and the archive to explore these sites and their meanings, drawing inspiration from disciplines such as archaeology, geology and geography, but fusing them with the intimate and poetic. The works thus suggest both intensely personal readings of place and history – whether through the delicate earth rubbings of Michelle Start’s Avebury works or Sophy Rickett’s correspondence with a stranger she met on the banks of the Severn – but also contrast subjective and objective modes of understanding place. They reinforce a reading of ‘landscape’ as a construction that combines a physical place with human relationships.

For Reynolds, Rickett and Stuart, research is an important part of the making of the work. All three artists are interested in the idea of the archive and the creative possibilities in the act of selectively gathering information. In creating their archive-like works, they use the photograph and the book as indexical documents, but subvert their authority. In addition, all three are interested in making journeys and consequently their works explore the ways in which travelling through and being in a landscape affects our experience of it and our understanding of its histories. Finally, all three are interested in the ways in which time and the passage of time can be encoded within the work. Ultimately the works articulate a sense of both past as present and the power and significance of particular places. They elide the contemporary and the historic, the cultural and the geological. They demonstrate, as Myfanwy Evans wrote of the great English painter Paul Nash and his interest in Avebury, ‘No interest in the past as past, but in the accumulated intenseness of the past as present.’

Ben Tufnell, Director of Parafin

MATERIAL LIGHT OPENS AT KOCHI MUZIRIS BIENNALE

Installation of Observation 95, 1991/2013 at Kettles Yard

The MATERIAL LIGHT EXHIBITION is hosted at the SRISHTI OUTPOST, MILL HALL COMPOUND, MATTANCHERY, KOCHI, KERALA, INDIA and is a collateral event of the Kochi Muziris Biennale

15.03.17 – 24.03.17

www.materiallight.net

Rather than causing the death of analogue photography, the dominance of digital media has recently increased interest in analogue and historical processes amongst image makers and artists. 


MATERIAL LIGHT explores the fallout from the collision of these two worlds through the work of a wide range of artists for whom the photographic image, either digital or analogue, is the main point of departure.


The exhibition includes installations, prints, film and video by 15 artists from the UK, India, and elsewhere. MATERIAL LIGHT has previously been shown in London and Belgrade and includes work from the host countries of previous exhibitions. Please see the Material Light website for full details of current and previous contributors. 

Participating artists:

Mia Cuk and Alia Zaparova / Serbia/Russia
Tereza Zelenkova / Czek Rebublic
Natasha Ranganath & Nandini Bhotika / India
Ajit Bhadoriya / India
Armenoui Kasparian Saraidari / Greece/Armenia
Slobodan Stosic / Serbia
David Blackmore / Ireland
Jonathan Michael Ray / UK
Jack Hirons / UK
Tahire Lal / India
Allan Parker / UK
Andre Pinkowski / Germany
Sophy Rickett / UK
Nihaal Faizal / India