| Voyages
Extraordinaires
2 - 30 June 2011
Opening Reception: Wednesday 1 June, 6:30 - 8:30pm
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works: Claire
Partington | Sam Branton
“Voyages
Extraordinaires” was the title Jules Verne gave
to his collection of fantastical tales at the end of
the 19th Century. On the cusp of the Modern Era but still
rooted in the past, the imagined possibilities of invention
were hybridised with age-old narratives of mythical monsters
to describe the excitement of the age. From flying machines
to submarines to space travel and giant squids - everything
seemed possible. Just over a century later, this optimism
seems all but vanished - and yet the power of the “extraordinary
hybrid” remains.
James Freeman Gallery is pleased
to present an exhibition by Claire Partington and Sam
Branton that revisits the “Voyage Extraordinaire”,
exploring current uses of the hybrid in contemporary
art today, rediscovering age-old archetypes, and reconfiguring
them into dark, historicised contemporary fantasies.
Claire
Partington delves
into the basic underpinnings of narrative, collecting
a cast of characters from the
vast pool of folklore and re-contextualising them in
a theatrical Period Drama. Her ceramic figures run the
full gamut of human vice and virtue.
Seemingly antique in their appearance, her works are
made using same materials as 17th Century English Delftware,
with interchangeable heads alluding to 19th Century Martinware
grotesques. Echoing the constant theme of zoomorphism
in fairytales, these characters shape-shift at will to
disguise their true nature. And dark undercurrents pervade
many of the works. “The Girl with the Silver Hands” relates
to a Grimm tale of a father who cut off his daughter’s
arms instead of giving her to the Devil; another to Charles
Perrault’s “Donkeyskin”, where a daughter
is forced to disguise herself with a donkey’s hide
to avoid marrying her father. Others have an almost idyllic
innocence, such as “Beauteous Nigard”, referencing
Hilliard’s Young Man Among the Roses (what Roy
Strong called the “supreme evocation of Elizabethan
Arcadia”) which Partington uses to evoke the cryptic
intricacies of vanity and courting. Throughout, her works
uncover archetypal figures that have endured for centuries
in a kind of shared cultural twilight, lying in wait
to hijack any narrative that comes their way.
Sam
Branton’s drawings imagine just such a story.
Emerging as if from a Victorian Opium dream, his tale
goes to the heart of how the narrative of adventure and
exoticism can become a platform for the indulgence of
some of humanity’s basest desires. Recounting a
kind of Jules Verne safari in a surreal cartoon world,
Branton melds Victorian photography with low-brow illustration
to narrate the fantastic voyage of a party of aristocrats
to an exotic island called “The Garden”.
Here, a fauna of hybrid creatures, bred exclusively to
satisfy the desires of the tourists, are subjected to
a myriad of abuses and debasements that the visitors
call Sport. Servants, serfs, playthings and prey, they
are effectively slaves to the arrogance of Imperial fancy.
Softly rendered in gentle blue pencil, their melancholy
faces tell of a resignation to their function. Absurd
and touching in equal measures, Branton’s
drawings ridicule with almost tragic parody the darker
undertones of cultural tourism and how any leisurely
Utopia must by necessity be built on a different, dystopic
foundation. They also highlight how the narrative of
adventure can become an unwitting channel for some of
our most sinister human behaviours.
More information & images: info@jamesfreemangallery.com / +44 (0)20 7226 3300
Claire
Partington studied Fine Art at Central St
Martins, graduating in 1995. Initially
working with national collections in museums such as
at the V&A in London, Claire returned to her fine
art practice in 2003 with a focus on ceramics. She exhibited
at the V&A in 2007, and since 2009 has exhibited
with the James Freeman Gallery, as well as at Young Masters
at the Truman Brewery, London (2010), curated by Matthew
Reeves. She lives and works in London.
Sam Branton (b. Oxford, 1985) studied Fine Art at Norwich,
graduating in 2005. Following a series of exhibitions
in both Europe and the USA, he exhibited at Metro-Land,
curated by the Flora Fairbairn Projects (2009), and held
a solo exhibition at the James Freeman Gallery (2009).
His work is part of the Kabin Collection (UK). He lives
and works in Oxford.
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