NEW YORK, NY.- For the past four decades British artist Nicola Hicks practice has centered around a world populated by a cast of humanized creatures and beast-like humans, expressing the universal, often darker aspects of humanity. The present exhibition brings together works from key periods in Hicks career from the 1990s to the present day, and is the first exhibition of works created entirely in bronze.
Hicks characters frequently resemble figures from common myths and shared stories, using a distinctive personal vocabulary to establish a connection between ancient and contemporary worlds. Central to this exhibition are works that involve themes of childhood and coming-of-age, often drawn from the perspective of the maternal gaze.
In the work titled Recovered Memory, the two standing figures of a wolf-man looming over a tiny child, enact a sinister scenario reminiscent of Little Red Riding Hood. The wolf is a recurrent figure in Hicks work, often interpreted as engendering childhood fears.
The newly-cast bronze sculpture Brave (loaned by the Yale Center for British Art), depicts the figure of a young boy, who adapts to the susceptibilities of youth by drawing his courage from the protective armour of a bearskin. Hicks continues to explore the fragile transition to adulthood in a work featuring a boyish figure with wolfs head titled Show me a Man and Ill Show you a Boy. The contrast between his proud, puffed out chest and diminutive frame reflects a jarring distinction between the innocence of the inner child and the culturally-driven pressures of being a man.
Other hybrid characters continue the transition into manhood, such as the recent work Owl Boy, where the heavy eyelids on the owl-human form allude to a nocturnal existence, and the nerve-ridden, fractured feeling of adolescence. In Relic, the fragmented bulls head and human torso represents a more ancient male character, who appears to be alone in the world and out of sync with contemporary times. Hicks describes the Minotaurs otherness as relating to the otherness of men, suggesting that the Minotaur motif, in her vocabulary, might also at times relate to a female sexual power and energy.
Originally created using a mixture of plaster and straw, the bronze casting process harnesses and preserves the haptic energy of their fragile surfaces, with patinas in earthern, black or white tones, recalling timeless natural substances derived from the earth, such as oil, clay, chalk or lime.
Nicola Hicks was born in London in 1960 and studied at Chelsea School of Art and the Royal College of Art. In 1995 Hicks was awarded an MBE for her contribution to the visual arts. Hicks sculpture and drawings have been presented in numerous international museums and galleries and she has completed several public commissions including large scale sculptures at Schoenthal Monastery, Langenbruck, Switzerland. Recent solo exhibitions include Tayloe Piggott Gallery, Wyoming USA; Sorry, Sorry Sarajevo, St Pauls Cathedral, London; Sculpture by Nicola Hicks at the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, United States; and her work was included in The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things, curated by Mark Leckey, as part of the Hayward Touring series at venues across the UK during 2013.
A major new monograph was published by Elephant in association with Flowers Gallery in 2017. Nicola Hicks: Keep Dark (Elephant Publishing) brings together around 100 images of Hickss sculptures and drawings, from 1985 to the present day, with accompanying texts written by the acclaimed authors and leading cultural figures David Mamet, Candia McWilliam, Max Porter, Matilda Pye, Will Self and Patterson Sims.