EROTICA
BEASTIA
New Works by Sam Branton
16 July - 8 August
2009
“ Mighty. A modern-day Dali” – Barbara
Ann Callahan, Director, Park Place Museum, Kentucky
“Don’t look, just carry on walking. Don’t
look!” – Teacher to his GCSE pupils
on a field trip
View
Exhibition Online
In the shadows
of moonlit streets, the corners of seedy offices and
the darkest nights of cinema’s
imagination - what lurks beneath the gritty surface
of film noir?
In his first solo exhibition,
Erotica Beastia, Sam Branton treats these places as
doorways into the erotic underbelly
of films and visual stories. Taking noir classics such
as Kiss Me Deadly, The Third Man, and Key Largo as the
starting points for his drawings, he introduces a cast
of cartoon-like characters that mix with and infect the
films’ original inhabitants. Set out as a visual
storyboard, the films begin to take place in an alien
world of humans and hybrids where the characters seem
oblivious to their descent into mutation and madness.
Cops become corrupted not
just morally but physically, their faces transformed
by elephantine phallic distortions
to make them look like sex toys in suits. Weird, wonderful,
gentle creatures hide in the shadows and, once found,
are interviewed, bullied, inspected and dissected by
the mob. By combining the psychological grit of film
noir with the tender innocence of playthings, the drawings
create an unusual sense of disorientation and disquiet,
the toys’ naivety enhancing a sense of animal sexuality
bubbling under in these corrupted, perverted characters.
In the process, the storyboard becomes like a maze into
which the viewer has stumbled and now, in too deep, can
see no way out of, and even less to hold on to or call “familiar”.
Much like any bacchanalia,
it has moments both light and dark. The innocence of
the playthings creates touching
scenes, such as the umbilical bond of the mutants in
suits of “What else have you got left”. Others
are humorous in their absurdity, like the deflated aggression
of two gangsters that can hardly hold their forms in “Boys,
forget the whale”. But throughout, the drawings
are shot through with a sexuality that sways from playful
perversion to raw carnal desire, captured poignantly
in the genital aberrations and insectine faces of the
swarm of men in “A hundred nuts and one squirrel”.
Erotica Beastia
opens with a forties freak show party on Thursday 16
July, amidst a crime-scene installation
in the gallery. The show runs until 8 August.
For more information and details please
contact:
James Freeman
- jfreeman@sesameart.com
+44 (0)20 7226 3300
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Boys, forget the whale
Charcoal on paper, 2009
67cm x 42cm

But I was born too late
Charcoal on paper, 2009
67cm x 42cm

A hundred nuts and one squirrel
Charcoal on paper, 2009
67cm x 42cm

What else have you got left
Charcoal on paper, 2009
67cm x 42cm
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