LONDON.- Modern Art announced a solo exhibition of new work by Anna-Bella Papp. This is Papps third solo show with the gallery.
Anna-Bella Papps exhibition at Modern Art features a series of new individual sculptures that, consistent with her characteristic format, are hand-sculpted, tablet-like forms made from fired clay, presented on long trestle tables in one narrative. Papps works move between representation and abstraction, each series exploring a different set of ideas through various techniques of sculpting and mark-making, all the while seemingly aware of and contained within the regular confines of their objecthood.
The focus of this new series is on a piece of land in the artists home of Romania, which may eventually become part of her inheritance. Each work becomes a means for speculation on the potential uses of this piece of land; the marks, grooves, and impressions on each works clay surface becoming something akin to an architectural plan, or an image of landscapes as seen from above. The series becomes a personal musing on not only legacy and time, but also on our relationship to the geography around us, in both the abstract and the real.
The exhibition includes a text written by Papp that accompanies this body of work.
Anna-Bella Papp was born in Chișineu-Criș, Romania, in 1988. She lives and works in Brussels, Belgium. She studied at the University of Art and Design, Cluj, Romania (2007−2010), and de Ateliers, Amsterdam, Netherlands (2011−2013). Anna-Bella Papp presented her first solo museum exhibition at the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, TX, USA, in 2014. Since then she has had solo exhibitions at Fondazione Arnaldo Pomodoro, Milan, Italy (2017); De Ateliers (Amsterdam Art Weekend), Amsterdam, Netherlands (2016); Spazio Cabinet, Milan, Italy (2016); and Bergen Kunsthall, Bergen, Norway (2015).