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Golden Thread Gallery: Disconnected: everyday tension No Ball Games in the Project Space - 25 Feb 2011 to 16 Apr 2011 Current Exhibition |
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Disconnected: everyday tension
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Disconnected: everyday tension 25th February � 16th April 2011 �disconnected�adrift in a relentless stream of social global media� updated� informed� with an understanding of all the pressing issues� armchair managers, water-cooler brokers, bus-shelter chief executives� omnipresent�knowing all� liked�blissfully disconnected from the neighbours� jobs in balance� faith blurred � suspended, powered up� disenchanted� beyond the rose tinged sex, drugs and violence of the rural idle� defined by the warmth and safety of negative equity� Disconnected: everyday tension is an exhibition of works by Maurice Doherty, Colm Clarke, Deirdre McKenna, Claire Morgan, Brendan O�Neill, Nicholas Keogh and Lorraine Burrell; exploring a range of observations and strategies engaged with rethinking superficial assumptions and contemporary shortcuts. About the artists Lorraine Burrell works in video and photography. She completed an MFA at the University of Ulster in 2005 and exhibits both nationally and internationally including Intersection: Globalization and Identity, Youkobo Art Space, Tokyo; Video Festival 07, Valencia, Spain and Engaged in Recreation, Borusan Culture and Art Centre, Istanbul. Her work is represented in various collections including the University of Ulster, Belfast. At present Burrell is represented by The Third Space Gallery, Belfast. Colm Clarke is an artist based in Belfast creating actions, sonic scores, and situations. He received a BA (hons) Fine Art from University of Ulster (2006) and was a co-director of Catalyst Arts between 2006 and 2008. He currently sits on the board of Bbeyond and is collaborative organiser with A4 sounds & MOOK collectives. Clarke has created actions locally and internationally with his live work featured at Arts Electronica, Belgrade Triennial, Art Karavan and Exist-ence. Clarke develops his approach as a tactile strategy focusing on the body and the relationship between the individual and the environment. He is interested in phenomena such as vibration and resonance in considering the mechanisms of entanglement and aesthetics of power. Maurice Doherty (b.1972) graduated from the University of Ulster, Belfast (1997) and went on to complete a Masters of Fine Art at Glasgow School of Art in 2001. Recent group exhibitions include: Beursschouwburg Kunstencentrum, Brussels (2010), MMX, Berlin (2010), Vulpes Vulpes, London (2010), The Project Room, Glasgow (2010), The City Art Rooms, Auckland (2009), and The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh (2009). Waiting is a video installation by Maurice Doherty, in which five waitresses have been employed to stand holding a tray of filled champagne glasses for as long as possible. Owing to the weight of the trays, the physical exertion and fatigue of each waitress increases as time moves on. Recorded as a single shot and presented life-size, voyeuristic implication becomes an integral part of the installation and synonymous to the protagonist�s travails. Nicholas Keogh (b. 1977) studied at the University of The West of England where he received a BA (Hons) in Fine Art in Context. Keogh lives and works in Belfast and is based at Lawrence Street Workshops. In recent years Nicky Keogh has participated in Experience Pommery #5: L'art en Europe 2008, Venice Biennale 2005. He has also exhibited internationally in New York, Chicago, San Sebastian and Lisbon. Deirdre McKenna (b.1973) is a Belfast based visual artist. McKenna studied Fine Art at the RTC Sligo, and then at the University of Ulster, Belfast. She acted as a co-director of Catalyst Arts between 2002 and 2004, exhibiting, organising and collaborating. McKenna returned to the University of Ulster to complete her Masters in Fine Art graduating in 2007. She received the Royal Ulster Academy�s Outstanding Student Award and the Dean�s Prize for her work. McKenna is a studio holder at Flax Art Studios, Belfast. Her work is housed in the Arts Council of Northern Ireland collection, in addition to numerous private collections. The work McKenna produces is often highly detailed with a personal narrative. Having trained as a painter, McKenna�s work lives somewhere between painting and sculpture with a strong emphasis on image making. She draws on the elevation of everyday situations and stories. Claire Morgan was born in Belfast and is now living in London. She has exhibited internationally, with solo and group shows in the UK and Europe, and museum shows in US and Australia. In 2004, Claire won awards from the Royal British Society of Sculptors and in 2006 was awarded first prize in the Premio Fondazione Arnaldo Pomodoro, Milan. In 2008, Gone With The Wind, shown at The Laing Gallery, received acclaim. Morgan�s work is concerned with the notion of change, the passing of time, and the transience of everything around us. There is a sense of fragility and a lack of solidity that carries through her practice. Animals, birds and insects have been present in her recent sculptures, with the use of suspense to create something akin to freeze frames. The evidence of gravity - or lack of it - inherent in these scenarios is what brings them to life, or death. Brendan O�Neill (b.1971) studied Fine Art at the University of Hertfordshire from 1994�1997 and on the MFA course at the University of Ulster from 2002�2004. O�Neill worked as a visiting lecturer in the Fine Art Department at the University of Hertfordshire from 1999�2002 and was awarded a three-year studio fellowship at the Digswell Art Trust (1998-2001). He also co-directed at Catalyst Arts, Belfast, from 2004�2007. O'Neill uses artistic practice as a tool for examining our perception of reality as well as our relationship to culture and its productions. His work explores the iconography of evangelism; "I am interested in the ways in which art and faith are connected and in the process of how images and objects are endowed with meaning beyond their materiality". The current body of new work is derived from the manipulation of different material and imagery. This is reflected in the combination of competing influences between the subject matter and material, often evoking a sense of ambiguity and irony. No Ball Games 3rd � 31st March 2011 Project Space Golden Thread Gallery Opening 6pm � 8pm on the 3rd of March No Ball Games has evolved from a dialogue between curator, Rebecca Gilbert and artists Jane Butler, Christopher Burns and Cameron Coombes. The work in this exhibition reflects the personal response of each artist to this ongoing conversation, which has centered on the architectural impact of dominant housing estates in our landscape, and has lead to exploring these structures with regard to personal experience and memory. Christopher James Burns (b. Belfast, 1988) graduated from the University of Ulster, Belfast (2010) with First Class Honours in Fine & Applied Art, where his work is now held in the Permanent Art Collection. Burns� practice is concerned with liminality, the in-between and things that are in transition. Child and Before, (2011) explore Burns� personal interaction to housing estates in the area and their architectural landscape through sculptural installation. The works are created through a merging of both present day and childhood experiences within these environments. Jane Butler (b. Belfast, 1986) completed her degree in Fine and Applied Art at the University of Ulster, Belfast (2009) specializing in sculpture and installation. Since graduating she has exhibited throughout Northern Ireland. In 2010, Butler was selected to join Array Studios in Belfast where she currently works as an artist. Butler�s work is situated on the interface between sculpture, space, architecture and design. A Curious Seriousness consists of installation and wall based work, which have been generated through numerous visits to housing estates in West Belfast, where she grew up. These works draw upon the repetitive design and colour of each estate, curiosities which have intrigued Butler from childhood. Cameron Coombes (b. Belfast, 1986) studied Photography and Digital Imaging at Leeds Metropolitan until 2010. He has since relocated to Belfast where his practice has developed through documentary photography. He enjoys mixing traditional with new technologies, by shooting on medium format film and using digital technologies to process his images. Coombes is interested in the interaction of humans with the landscape that surrounds them and has recently embarked upon a project to document all the major housing estates in Northern Ireland, observing these social scenes, with a distinct interest in the large expanses of green amid the clutter of terrace houses. The works within this exhibition are taken from this series. Rebecca Gilbert (b. Belfast, 1987) has recently completed a Masters in Contemporary Art Theory from Edinburgh College of Art. Gilbert is an emerging curator currently working on a variety of projects in both Belfast and Edinburgh. As part of her degree, Gilbert co-curated They Do Things Differently There, Edinburgh (2010). No Ball Games is Gilbert�s first solo curated exhibition, in which the themes of the exhibition have been developed through continuous discussion and dialogue between herself and the artists involved. Golden Thread Gallery 84-94 Great Patrick Street Belfast BT1 2LU Email - [email protected] Web � www.gtgallery.co.uk Tel � 028 90330920 |
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