Category Archives: 2022

In Correspondence

Della Gooden and Moyra Derby

RAUMX show from 28.10.2022- until Saturday 12.11.2022 Preview Thursday 27.10 – 6pm

To be in correspondence is to be in active dialogue over time, with another person. It is most often understood within the context of writing letters, where a mutual need to maintain and nourish an exchange delivers repeated response and counter response on the page. A sense of momentum between two writers might be characterised by asymmetrical flurries of activity and quieter moments when nothing is said.

This particular correspondence began in February 2022 between us: Moyra Derby and Della Gooden. It is an ongoing exchange that will continue up to, and during, the making of an exhibition at RAUMX, London at the end of October 2022. At the time of writing the exhibition is three weeks away. This booklet presents a partial record of the last 7 months, it draws on the occasions when we met in person, zoomed, texted, and emailed.

We noticed very quickly that there is a shared porousness in our practices: an openness to spatial circumstance, to architecture, a mutual sensibility for the positioning of a viewer/participant and an understanding of the duration of experience. Consequently, we also knew that we would not be taking completed works ready to hang for the exhibition. Instead, elements would need to be open to being resolved in the space, as a physical and visual continuance of our exchange; a series of moves and counter moves, back and forth between our two practices.

Della Gooden, Drawn Solid, 2022 | materials: aluminium bar, white gesso, the gallery wall, and the full architectural context. Dim. Variable

Correspondence carries a sense of equivalence and comparison, and it was clear that the correlation and interaction between worked surfaces, material objects, the parts and positioning of our works mattered. They disclosed our interest in composition, in the pictorial, in painting and its histories.

Usually there are no spectators to the creative decisions we each make in our studios but In Correspondence positions us each as a spectator to the other’s process. We are trusting each other with the unknown and unresolved aspects of a practice in progress.

Moyra Derby, Room Plan, 2022 | Installation detail from solo exhibition at Studio 3 Gallery, Canterbury

When it comes to the installation of the exhibition at RAUMX this is particularly the case because we will be obliged to take on board the complexities of a social and spatial dynamic as the works start to correspond directly in the space, and are changed through that exchange. There will inevitably be turn-taking, sequential adjustments and edits, and a mutual responsiveness to the material qualities or tonality of the elements we each bring. In this process we are interested in the value of shared attention, which can open out an experience, redirect it and re-tune it.

To be in correspondence with a trusted person can offer a ‘differencing’ from the life we otherwise lead. It can be a space for collusion and revelation, for a different reality. The exhibition In Correspondence at RAUMX will be the outcome of an exchange lasting over 8 months. This project presents a challenging ‘differencing’ from the practices we each have and already know.

Moyra Derby

Moyra Derby, Painting Index: 743, 2022 | materials: acrylic on multiple laser cut panels | Dimensions: 13 x 21cm | detail from ‘grid narrative for Sophie Germain’

Born in Omagh, Northern Ireland, Moyra Derby is an artist working with painting and pictorial conventions. Her two solo exhibitions in 2022: Room Plan at Studio 3 gallery in the School of Arts and Grid Narrative for Sophie Germain, in the Sibson Building, School of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science at the University of Kent, both mark the completion of a practice based PhD A Cut in Attention: Reimagining Attentional Capacities for Painting. Recent group exhibitions and projects include: After Bauhaus, group exhibition in response to Bauhaus Centenary, Herbert Read Gallery, Canterbury, 2019; Interval [ ] slide show, Crate, Margate 2022; The Disoeuvre: Household Mix, Roseville, Ramsgate 2022; Notes on Painting II, Koppel Project Central, London 2019; Interval [ ] still: now, Tintype gallery, London 2018; Muster Station: The School of Beginnings, Tate Exchange, London 2018. Recent writing includes The Productive Inadequacy of Image for Contemporary Painting: Image Based Operations in the Work of Beth Harland, Jacqueline Humphries and R H Quaytman, in The Journal for the Philosophy of Language, Mind and the Arts, Vol 2:1 2021; Models of Attention in the Journal of Contemporary Painting, Vol 5:1 2019; Indexing Notes on Painting, catalogue text for Notes on Painting II, London 2018.

Della Gooden

Della Gooden, One Line, One Ladder, One Painting, 2018 (installation close up) | materials: graphite ‘line 22’, the gallery roof access ladder, and the left-hand edge of Eileen Agar’s painting ‘Untitled’ 1985) | Dimensions variable,

Della Gooden lives and works in London. Her work has a commitment to and a relationship with the pictorial – even though it is often dimensional, and installation based. Recent exhibitions/projects: Thinking Thresholds, with Richard Bell, THEY COME. THEY SIT. THEY GO., London, 2022; Models & Combos, a publication 2022; The Land of Sol, Sol Space, Nouic, France, curated by Ashley West, 2021; This Year’s Model, Studio 1.1, London, 2021; The Undersides of Practice, for the APT SHOTS programme, APT Gallery, London, 2020 co-curated with Catherine Ferguson; Hard Painting x2, Phoenix Art Space, Brighton, 2020 (an ACE funded exhibition co-curated with Ian Boutell, Philip Cole, Stig Evans & Patrick O’Donnell); Temporal Objects, Saturation Point, London, 2020; The Secret Life of Stuff, ARTHOUSE1, London, 2018. Writing complements studio work and essays include, amongst others: Surface-things, for Transforming Surfaces at ARTHOUSE1 Gallery, London; Theories of the World in my Head, for Eccentric Geometric, curated by Jo McGonigal & Deb Covell; A Slice of Bright Space, for Hard Painting x2 at Phoenix Art Space, Brighton. In 2005, Della founded VINEspace, an independent project space, and then Gooden Gallery, London – at this time she developed and curated alternative platforms ‘A One Night Stand With…’ and ‘24/SEVEN’.

Shila Khatami – Daniel Sturgis – Preview Thursday 19.05.2022

During May 2022 we are showing Berlin based artist Shila Khatami and London based painter Daniel Sturgis.

Daniel Sturgis

By bringing together and combining references from art, contemporary culture, abstraction and design, Daniel Sturgis’s paintings recognise abstract painting’s contested relationship to the contemporary world. Resolutely two-dimensional, and often visually up-beat, these are paradoxical paintings that reflect on the act of making, the legacies of modernist painting, and the present-day.

Daniel Sturgis Studied Abandon_1,2021 ; 152 x 152 cm

Carefully hand-crafted in flat acrylic paint, Sturgis’s canvases use hard-edged abstraction as an arena to question the assumptions and exclusivity of abstraction. His paintings allow order and difference to happily coalesce. By interweaving ideas of opticality, movement and visual balance, Sturgis creates both formal and comic tensions. Through the use of small, coloured dots, visual layering, or by forms being representationally suggestive, these works contain strong anthropomorphic qualities. Shapes become sentient, and a visual and theoretical instability is implied.

Daniel Sturgis, Studied Abandon_2- 2021; 152×152 cm

Sturgis chose paintings from the series of Studied Abandon (2021), recognising what he describes as ‘a slight urbanism and toughness’ in their colours and graphic, layered, compositions to be in dialogue with work by Shila Khatami.

Daniel Sturgis, Studied Abandon_3_2021; 95×95 cm

www.danielsturgis.co.uk

Shila Khatami

Shila Khatami, Beinschwarz | 2022 | 250 x 180 cm | Rabbit glue, Acrylic on canvas

The interweaving of art within society is a central theme of my work. I examine the abstract vocabulary in urban space and its references to art history. I then translate these iterations of painting, back into an artistic context. 

The materials and the accompanying color palette refer back to the real life, non-artistic applications of these forms, such as a paint bomb or road damage lines. 

Loose gestures counteract the rigid geometric construction. The variety of painting in my works can be understood as a meta commentary on painting. 

In doing so, I am interested in questions immanent to the picture such as, “What is a picture?;” “How does a picture come into being?” and „From what does a picture originate?“

Shila Khatami https://www.shilakhatami.com

Shila Khatami , Anstrich22|250x180cm|rabbit skin glue on canvas