LONDON.- This winter, the
Serpentine presents the works of acclaimed British artist Rose Wylie (born 1934, UK). Wylie finds inspiration for her visually compelling paintings through her daily encounters and a variety of sources, from art history, cinema, comic books and the natural world to news, verbal anecdotes, celebrity stories and sport. These might include a scene from Quentin Tarantinos iconic Kill Bill films, a self-portrait of Wylie eating a chocolate biscuit, an olive oil label or a football match. Her vibrant, large-scale canvases will fill the walls of the Serpentine Sackler Gallery.
Quack Quack includes paintings dating from the late 1990s to the present day some never previously exhibited, including a new group of works inspired by Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens. One, based on Wylies childhood memories of living in Bayswater during the Blitz, maps the parks landscape dogs, ducks, the Serpentine lake, and both the historic building and Zaha Hadids present day extension of the Gallery with memories of Spitfires and Messerschmitt planes fighting overhead. The exhibition title connects similarly to place as well as to ack-ack, a term used to describe Second World War anti-aircraft artillery.
Wylie often paints through the filter of memory and impression, using text to enhance facts and recollections and editing images by overlaying new pieces of canvas over images, like a collage. At times, the compositions of her paintings are informed by cinematic techniques, whether the multiple headshots of Sitting on a Bench with Border (Film Notes) 2008, based on Pedro Almodóvars 2006 film Volver, or Wylies two paintings from the 2005 film Syriana, which take in a panoramic and close-up shot of the same scene.
Instilled with wit, Wylies paintings are confident, animated and energetic, proposing new perspectives on the world and the plethora of images that make up our collective cultural memory.
Quack Quack will be accompanied by a publication featuring new texts by Serpentine Exhibitions Curator Melissa Blanchflower, writer Barry Schwabsky and artists Tal R, Alvaro Barrington and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye. Rose Wylie has produced a Limited Edition print to coincide with the exhibition.
The Serpentine winter season continues with Wade Guytons Das New Yorker Atelier, Abridged at the Serpentine Gallery until 8 February 2018.
Rose Wylie studied at Folkestone and Dover School of Art (19526) and at the Royal College of Art, London (197981). Wylie gained wider attention after representing Great Britain in the exhibition Women To Watch, National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington D.C. in 2010. She received the Paul Hamlyn Award in 2011 prior to winning the John Moores Painting Prize in 2014, the same year she was elected a Royal Academician.
Wylies recent solo exhibitions include: Neue Galerie Gladbeck (2017); Choi&Lager, Cologne (2017); David Zwirner, London (2016); Chapter Gallery, Cardiff (2016); Turner Contemporary, Margate (2016); Space K, Seoul (2016); UNION Gallery, London (2016); VW (VeneKlasen / Werner), Berlin (2015); Staedtische Galerie Wolfsburg (2014); Tate Britain BP Spotlight Display (2014) Haugar Museum, Tønsberg (2013); and Jerwood Gallery, Hastings (2012). Selected group exhibitions include: Summer Exhibition, Royal Academy of Arts, London (2015, 2016, 2017); Azerbaijan Pavilion, Venice Biennale (2015); Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool (2014) and EAST International, Norwich Gallery (1994, 2004, 2007).