| Pretty
Disastrous
8 -
31 March 2012
View Installation Images
AN
Interface Review by Joanna Lee | Flavorpill (Editor's
Pick) | isendyouthis (Highlight)
| Spoonfed | Snipe
James Freeman Gallery is pleased
to present ‘Pretty Disastrous’, a new large
scale installation by the British artist Craig Fisher.
Walking into a Craig Fisher
installation is like stepping onto a cartoon film
set, only to find that the plot
has turned decidedly sinister. The colours and wall
patterns are bright and playful; the objects are over
sized and over-simplified, fashioned out of fabric
to be soft and gentle. But the scene itself tells a
different story: smashed up structures strewn across
the floor, bloodstains on the wall, an axe lying in
the corner… The whole space speaks of menace,
like a kind of soft play for psychopaths. Violence
and Velcro, disaster and decoration - Fisher’s
world is a stitch-up of contradictory ideas.
It’s clear that Fisher’s work is all about
play, but his toys are ideas rather than objects. Hard/soft,
threatening/friendly, fun/fearful – Fisher’s
mise-en-scene puts the reliability of any clear-cut
distinctions in doubt. This active ambiguity carries
through to all levels of his work. Although composed
of individual sculptures, his installations operate
as images, like cinematic scenes to be physically explored.
The use of fabric and stitching is essentially ‘craft’,
and yet the installations are clearly ‘fine art’ in
thought, ambition and execution. The references at
work jump from popular TV & film such as South
Park or Kill Bill at one moment, to the sculpture of
Claes Oldenburg or Richard Artschwager the next. At
every stage, Fisher’s work defies straight definition.
‘Pretty Disastrous’ contains several sculptures
that take violence or disaster as their starting point. ‘Pile’,
a collection of oversized fabric weapons, sits in one
corner like an Itchy & Scratchy weapons amnesty,
or equally like the start of getting tooled up for
a fight. In another corner ‘Chopper’, an
oversized cartoon axe, sits alongside a smashed up
fabric pallet that litters the space with destruction.
His multi-layered disaster drawings have a purity of
line that is charmingly simple, almost naïve,
and yet feel cold and clinical in light of the subject
matter. Every element of the installation is designed
to create contradictions. Visually it may be violent
but conceptually, it’s disarming, an object lesson
in just how seductive the process of disorientation
can be.
Craig Fisher (b. 1976) graduated from Goldsmiths College,
University of London with an MA (Distinction) in Fine
Art in 2000. He has exhibited widely both in the UK
and internationally, with solo exhibitions at CoExist
Gallery, Southend (2011), Bonington Gallery, Nottingham
(2009), Galerie BK, Bern, Switzerland (2008), and Rokeby,
London (2007), and group exhibitions including South
London Gallery, London (2010), Cafe Gallery Projects,
London (2009), Artspace, Sydney (2007) and Mark Moore
Gallery, Los Angeles (2006). He also curated and exhibited
in Pile, Surface Gallery, Nottingham (2010), which
was one of 15 commissioned projects for Sideshow 2010
in Nottingham. The exhibition then went on to tour
to Chapter Arts Centre, Cardiff, (2011).
For more information,
please contact the gallery. |


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