Category Archives: 2024

Clem Crosby – Martina Geccelli

26.10.2024 – 9.10.2024 Preview 24.10.2024

Clem Crosby

http://www.clemcrosby.com

The emphasis is on the demotic line – a line anyone can make. The drawing could be thought of as expanded crayon mark-making – applied and reapplied so traces of the iterative process continually providing an armature on which to work. My painting is less about craft, and more about discovery, with each mark suggesting another, images collapsing and reappearing with the desire to continue the initial excitement of the first touch throughout the painting. 

Clem Crosby, October, 2024

‘…(these works) show a deep affinity with this organic ebb and flow of the field, merging and weaving, peaks, moments of intensity and vortices. Related to this is the direct motion of the whole – the unspooling of the form or gestures across the surface. This relates to a hinterland where drawing and writing relate’.                                                    

David Ryan, Clem Crosby – Between Surface and Event, Exhibition catalogue, University of Central Lancashire. 2018

Clem Crosby, The Apostate, 2017 Oil and oil bar on Dibond 65 × 48 ins (165 × 122 cm)


‘…Crosby used to paint monochromes, but in his more recent paintings, it is as if what earlier on would have been a single, all over colour complex, was being untied, it’s weave being opened up for inspection…. informality meets analytic intensity…. the closer they seem to fall apart, the better they are’

Barry Schwabsky, Artforum September 2011

Clem Crosby ,Black Baroque 2020
Oil and oil bar on Dibond mounted on aluminium sub frame
68 x 48 ins (173 x 122 cm)




Martina Geccelli

https://www.instagram.com/martinageccelli/

Martina Geccelli, Bow-Rind – Bowl, 2021 glazed ceramic

Shatters 

In Geccelli’s clay works, abstract forms arise from wild, often accidental growth. Over a base of discharged vessels, added elements moving fluidly. These pieces emerge from ‘accidents’; purpose-free parts holding the shambles together. A process of destruction and rejoining creates something resilient. Martina Geccelli seeks immediacy and emotion, forming unique sculptures by combining shapes. Listening to possibilities, she embraces accidental contexts where forms develop, risking further destruction after leaving the kiln. 

Similar so in Geccelli’s work with paper; from a single sheet crumbling and cuts form sculptures. When the sheet gets rejoined disorderly,  a sculptural form emerges.  

Her work accepts destruction, vulnerability, and odd results, an open process leading to one best choice. A composition is hard to see, its rather a growth, a movement- an absence of order. 
Beauty might emerge. 
 
It holds its personality – it is IT. 

Martina Geccelli, crumbled Paper , 2024
Martina Geccelli , Toppled 2, 2023 ceramic glazed

Heaps of broken
in between
hollowed vessel –
amidst
a hole in the clutter
adapting to space

Martina Geccelli, crumbled 2/2024 paper, paperclips, magnet

More Happy – More Curious

Cedric Christie – Andreas Exner

Andreas Exner

Andreas Exner, Gelber Rock / Yellow Skirt , 2013 farbric,zip, pins

to elevate nothing into something…. The work of Andreas Exner

Face to face with a work from Andreas Exner I see nothing but the Thing itself (das Ding an sich) … and so encounter something beyond that which I see. There’s the object that it is … and what it points to beyond… 

Andreas Exner - 4 Bilder , Off Hook, Groningen 2023
Andreas Exner – 4 Bilder , Off Hook, Groningen 2023

A dark green triangle of woollen fabric insists that I come closer and enquire of it. What are you? Why are you like that? As such, we are in the realm of human desire – wanting to know something about another being

A filled-in surface of mute colour makes me smile but I don’t know what the joke is. Openings that are filled in: containers that are satisfyingly full to the brim. They are full only with their own materiality, their own matter – a silent interior. 

There is nothing there. There is nothing.

It’s the nothing, this little no-thing that we hold so dear, because it’s always there. Always there but also hidden. An artwork shows this Thing by elevating a little nothing into something grand: it takes any old thing and transforms it into something with dignity, transforms it into something sublime, perhaps. 

You might think old clothes, large underpants and toilets are undignified, but in the care of Exner they convey a transcendence that comes from the human subjects, the bodies, they infer or index. There is a substantial kindness at work here, a kindness that tolerates the abject, the refused, the disliked: the sort of kindness we need in the world these days.

I see the stuff of Exner and I feel myself: the coloured works map my body and soul. These works are a writing, and as such are intrinsically social, knitting together the symbolic of language and the real beyond. See there… the word sozial made soft and limp, holes into a patchwork curtain so that it shows its own underbelly. And there… a skirt once worn around a woman’s waist – now a majestic site. And here, the common automobile injected with uplifting colour into the open windows: such an act transforms the suburban street into a venue of mysterious and playful interaction, and transforms the ordinary object, an object of daily commerce and industry, into a Thing of love. 

It’s social work: empowering the nothings so that we might have desire for life.

Lizzy Newman 2006

Andreas Exner , Artists Acrylics Brilliant Pink; Fiat 850
Andreas Exner, Drei Kleider / 3 Garments

Cedric Christie

Cedric Christie Bonnet

When I look at a Judd, I see a question. 

That’s what they were doing then: asking questions like “Could this be a sculpture or is it just an object?” 

So how do you ask those questions now? How do you ask the same questions but in a different context? It’s a bit like politics.

Two hundred years ago, someone had the idea to abolish slavery, and through politics, changes were made. Now, in the present day, I can ask the questions “How am I benefiting from the change? – how have those changes made an impact?” 

Excerpt  from an interview with Katrina Blannin /  MASS Sculpture Magazine, Issue 2, 2023

Cedric Christie Colour Unlocked
Cedric Christie Colour Unlocked
Cedric Christie Colour Unlocked