LONDON.- Pace Gallery will present Recent Works, Prabhavathi Meppayils first solo exhibition at 6 Burlington Gardens and the third presented with the gallery, on view from 26 April to 25 May 2019. The exhibition will feature a new body of work that continues to explore Meppayils concerns of modernism and Minimalism.
Meppayils linear designs in her work are not engendered by manual artisanal means or painterly processes: drawing, facture, and gesture originating either from pointed indentations or from linear metal insertions that singularly define graphic structures. Meppayils paintings seem to be driven by a latent desire to leave behind the parameters of pictorial space and its supporting surfaces, reaching for an ultimate sublation of the painterly rectangle in a numinous architectural space. Benjamin H.D.Buchloh, 2014.
The descendant of several generations of goldsmiths, Meppayil retains the unmistakable traces of the artists hand combined with an element of chance, inflecting Minimalist formulas and intermissions with a profoundly transcendental dimension specific to her setting and craftmanship methods.
The use of traditional tools, which are essentially geometric in form, is the focal point of Meppayils large-scale installation exhibited at the 2018 Biennale of Sydney and replicated in the exhibition at Pace.sb/eighteen consists of gesso and 875 found iron, copper and brass tools, carefully assembled on a wall with a pristine white surface. The individual objects are deliberately arranged in a pattern suggesting a low-relief grid. These objects, conventionally used by goldsmiths in the application of their craft, also allude to postwar abstraction where geometric structures were often used to facilitate non-hierarchical methods of organisation. Three new cast concrete and copper sculptures reference these traditional tools.
By taking tools that are commonly used in the artisanal process, most of which are obsolete and dislodged from their original purpose, Meppayil reiterates them as art objects while also retaining vestiges of their individual histories. This process also emphasizes their materiality and simple forms.
Lines and carving also remain a leitmotif in her oeuvre, as Meppayil expresses the necessity to come back to the pureness and essence of the material. These paintings feature copper wires embedded in heavily gessoed surfaces and rows of indented marks left with goldsmiths tools most notably the thinnam used to incise ornamental patterns in bangles. The delicacy of the lines and marks belie the intense labour needed to create these works.
Coinciding with Recent Works, Meppayils piece titled n/eighty nine (2016) will be featured in the forthcoming collection display, Home Is a Foreign Place, at The Met Breuer from 9 April 2019 to 21 June 2020. This exhibition will introduce recent acquisitions by the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art of The Met.
In rich dialogue with Paces history, Meppayils reinterpretation of Minimalist trademarks such as the grid recall the visual language of Agnes Martin, whilst her dedication to surface and pure monochromy evoke Robert Ryman. Recent Works will also coincide with this years Venice Biennale. The Encyclopedic Palace, curated by Massimiliano Gioni, at the 55th Venice Biennale (2013) included Meppayils work, which subsequently prompted the start of the relationship with Pace.