Galleria Continua opens an exhibition of works by Antony Gormley
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 14, 2024


Galleria Continua opens an exhibition of works by Antony Gormley
Antony Gormley - CIRCUIT 2022. Cast iron, 29.3 x 201.3 x 122.4 cm. Photograph by Stephen White & Co. © the artist.



BEIJING.- Galleria Continua presents ‘Body Buildings’, Antony Gormley’s third solo exhibition at the 798 Art District in Beijing following ‘Another Singularity’ (2009) and ‘Host’ (2016). ‘Body Buildings’ interrogates our species’ relationship to the built environment, an increasingly high-rise world we rarely escape. In a significant group of recent sculptures and drawings, Gormley uses clay and iron, two ubiquitous materials of the built world, ‘to think and feel the body in this condition’.

The central work in the exhibition, Resting Place II, conjures a dense labyrinthine terrain that viewers are invited to enter and navigate. This field of 132 life-size bodies, each built from fired clay bricks stacked atop one another, investigates the body at rest as our primary dwelling place. For the artist, the brick is a ‘physical pixel’ that plays an important role in Chinese culture.

Constructed in different orthogonal yet precarious positions, the bodies evoke a range of conditions, from splayed relaxation to foetal self-protection. When viewed from the gallery’s first and second-floor balconies, the interplay between moving visitors and horizontal clay bodies creates a dynamic field in which the particularity of subjective experience is at work.

As Gormley has said: ‘Resting Place II evokes the human body’s relationship to the ground, the surface of the earth. It refers to two very different kinds of abandonment: the relaxed abandonment of the body on the beach, the place to which we return in childhood play and relaxation, and another, that of the migrant who has either forcibly or freely sought a new home. What at first looks like a chaotic display of building materials might resolve into the model of a city and further resolve into the invitation to empathise with the body as a place of indwelling, some evoking states of deep relaxation and contentment, others of retreat and defence.’

Accompanying Resting Place II are sculptures cast in iron, such as Circuit and Ally, which explore parallels between urban infrastructure— roads, electrical circuits, plumbing—and human relationships. Circuit transforms these networks into a circulatory system shared by two bodies, while Ally uses stacks of massive cast iron blocks to test how two bodies can find mutual stability through a shared centre of gravity. These explorations of proximity and intimacy ask to what extent the urban environment shapes and mirrors human connections.

On either side of Circuit are Short and Shame, two works that treat the body as an independent energy field in which the body veers from its centre of gravity, purposefully avoiding the stability associated with statues of power. In a series of tight knots, Shame identifies places of tension within the body— ankles, knees, pelvis, head and hands—while Short escapes the bounding condition of the skin as the iron lines move from inside the body to beyond its apparent surface.

On the gallery’s top floor, Rule III and Buttress transform body space into latticed scaffolding, familiar to us in the skeletons of contemporary high-rise architecture. In doing so, the works materialise the way that having made a world, it now makes us. The two rusting bodies are placed directly against the walls, implicating the architectural context and making visitors aware of their relationship to the built environment.

The sculptures are accompanied by a series of drawings. Singularity X and Event VII evoke the luminous beginnings of astral matter. They are complemented by a series of layered ‘Lux’ drawings that refer to apertures or sources of light glimpsed from within interiors. Other drawings made using inkcap mushroom ink as well as carbon and casein examine darkness as experienced inside the body and in proximity to another.

‘Body Buildings’ is an interrogation of the state of our species. Gormley offers these sculptures as diagnostic tools to examine our present condition.










Today's News

November 13, 2024

"Water Drops on Burning Rocks" Exhibition Unites Ukrainian and Spanish Artists in NYC

Exploring cultural barriers and technological interweaving: The layered narratives of Qupei

Shapero Modern opens 'The Modern Muse' in new Bond Street Gallery

Both classics and contemporary favorites landed in the top 10 at Morphy's $1.1M+ Toys & Collectibles Auction

Art Institute of Chicago announces Eric Lefkofsky as new Chair of the Board of Trustees

Giant dinosaur skeleton to hit the auction block

Restoration begins of Rembrandt's The Night Watch

First major U.S. retrospective of Camille Pissarro in over 40 years to premiere at Denver Art Museum in fall 2025

The Brooklyn Museum opens an expansive exhibition exploring gold through six thousand years of history

The Prado Museum showcases recently acquired polychrome wooden sculptures for the first time

Solo exhibition by American artist Sanford Biggers on view at MASSIMODECARLO

NGV Architecture Commission 2024: Home Truth by Breathe

Steph Wilson wins first place in the Taylor Wessing Photo Portrait Prize 2024 for Sonam

Leopold Museum showcases a representative selection of exhibits from the Backhausen Archive

Whatcom Museum Executive Director announces retirement

Nico Williams wins 2024 Sobey Art Award grand prize

MoMA opens an installation of Henri Matisse's cut-outs

Secession presents new video guide in Austrian Sign Language

ifa Gallery Stuttgart opens '(Re)Born from Volcanos'

Galerie Valerie Traan presents an exhibition of sculptural works by Julia Cottin

Es Devlin and Anya Hindmarch among new ambassadors for University of the Arts London

Lorna Simpson debuts a new body of work at Hauser & Wirth

Galleria Continua opens an exhibition of works by Antony Gormley

Exhibition at Michael Werner Gallery pairs paintings by Markus Lüpertz and Pierre Puvis de Chavannes




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful