Inspiration
05/04/21
25/03/21
This species (Parablepharis kuhlii) is quick to fall into leaf mimicry, pulling the back four legs in tight and extending the front two legs out (one of which is fully opened). Against a stark, plain background the effect is interesting visually, but I have a feeling if this was done in the wild, amongst natural twigs and foliage, the effect would be even more impressive and the mantis would be incredibly difficult to spot 🔍👀.
20/01/21
Clare Strand @ The Photographer's Gallery
The Discrete Channel with Noise
Deutsche Börse Prize 2020
Daphne Wright @ Frith Street Gallery
A quiet mutiny - persists
11 September 2020 - 14 November 2020
13/06/20
26/05/20
Mushrooms @ Somerset House
Margaret Curtis @ Contemporary Ceramics Centre
These are some photos I took of my favourite works from “Surface”, a show of Margaret Curtis’ work currently on at the Contemporary Ceramics Centre in Bloomsbury.
When looking at ceramics I instinctively jump straight to drawing links between the clay form and the human form. I can’t help it, it’s my primary method for interacting with and understanding ceramic work. One of the things that attracts me to Margaret’s work is the fleshy quality I see in some of her pieces. Areas of pink seem to sit just below the surface, showing through from underneath the white, softened and diffused, visible almost in spite of the white. These remind me of bruising, of flesh that has been mistreated, but where the skin has not been broken. An injury, but not quite a wound.
This is in contrast to some of Margaret’s other pieces which display marks more typical of a wound, a breaking of the white surface glaze layers to the dark clay body underneath. On some pieces the “wounds” look almost like something bursting out of a body, of an inner force pushing outwards, the clay ripping and tearing. Others are a reverse of this, the marks more clearly coming from the outside, breaking the thicker surface glaze more cleanly, like stab wounds. There is a photo of Curtis in the show, in which she is pictured making incisions into one of the pieces, wielding her wooden tool like a weapon.
Surface is on at the Contemporary Ceramics Centre in Bloomsbury until September 14th.