Three Emerging London-Based Artists Present 'Transmission' at Haunch of Venison
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, October 6, 2024


Three Emerging London-Based Artists Present 'Transmission' at Haunch of Venison
‘Transmission’ brings together three emerging London-based artists – a painter, a sculptor and a multimedia artist – and explores the affinities they share with regards to notions of transference and abstraction.



LONDON.- 'Transmission' brings together three emerging London-based artists – a painter, a sculptor and a multimedia artist – and explores the affinities they share with regards to notions of transference and abstraction. While the work of Adam Dix, Alex Hoda and Katie Paterson is shaped by very different thematic and formal concerns, there are underlying correspondences in their approach to considerations such as the transmission of meaning, the dislocation of context and the mutation of form. Objects and forms are often manipulated or abstracted in their works, their original function obscured. This exhibition seeks to reveal the points of intersection in Dix, Hoda and Paterson's practices, showcasing the work of three exciting young artists at the start of promising careers.

Adam Dix mines the graphic culture and sociology of the 1950s in his paintings, creating portentous, science-fiction-inspired scenes in which regimented or ritualistic figures are posited in a strange and indeterminate relationship with the devices of modern telecommunications: computers, satellite dishes, and communication towers. In these imagined compositions, Dix deploys the pastel palette of 1950s graphic material, building up layers of ink and oil washes in a way that mimics the outdated effect of early mass-produced prints. Dix is interested in how humanity is instrumentalised by its reliance on communication and connectivity, and how its attitude towards modern telecommunications frequently assumes the reverence and awe of ritualistic or cult-like behaviour. His is a visual language that at once suggests a nostalgic longing for a technological utopia, and the failed promises of such a vision.

Alex Hoda's rubber and latex sculptures possess a psychic and sexual energy that borders on the fetishistic while maintaining a strong relationship to classical form. Fashioned from a variety of found objects – kitsch ceramic animals, Halloween masks, sex toys and other paraphernalia – which are removed from their original context and transmuted into new, anthropomorphically suggestive forms, Hoda's beasts exhibit basic, animalistic drives and are seemingly engaged in acts of rutting, suckling, nurturing and mating. Resistant to literal or plainly descriptive forms, these sculptures sustain an uneasy tension between figuration and abstraction, between the internal and external, and between the classical and the abject or grotesque. They are as closely in dialogue with Rodin or Henry Moore as they are with Matthew Barney or Paul McCarthy. Evocatively titled using conjunctions such as Gobstopper, Screwdriver or Jawbreaker, Hoda's ambiguous forms foreground the very process of sculpture – its acts of joining and combining, morphing and mutating.

Katie Paterson's conceptual projects make use of sophisticated technologies and specialist expertise to stage intimate, poetic and philosophical engagements between man and his natural environment. Combining a Romantic sensibility with a research-based approach and coolly minimalist presentation, her work collapses the distance between the viewer and the most distant edges of time and the cosmos. In the past, Paterson has broadcast the sounds of a melting glacier live to a visitor on a mobile phone in an art gallery, mapped all the dead stars, compiled a slide archive of the history of darkness across the ages, custom-made a light bulb to simulate the experience of moonlight, and buried a nano-sized grain of sand deep within the Sahara desert. Eliciting feelings of humility, wonder and melancholy akin to the experience of the Romantic sublime, Paterson's work is at once understated in gesture and yet monumental in scope. The development and production of her work involves close collaboration with specialists in different technologies, whether astronomers, electrical engineers or amateur radio enthusiasts known as 'moon-bouncers'.

The exhibition is on view at Haunch of Venison through November 6, 2010.





Haunch of Venison | Adam Dix | 'Transmission' |





Today's News

October 11, 2010

Overview of Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s Creative Development at Hamburger Kunsthalle

Ai Weiwei Presents New Commission in The Unilever Series at Tate Modern's Turbine Hall

Exceptional Public Exhibitions, Events and Auctions at Christie's During Frieze Week

Rare Nude Study by Czech Photographer Frantisek Drtikol to Sell at Bonhams

British Sculptor Sir Anthony Caro OM, CBE to Exhibit at Sculpture by the Sea, Bondi

Sotheby's to Sell Francis Bacon's Figure In Movement, Gift from the Artist to his Doctor

RM Auctions Vintage Motor Cars of Hershey Event Posts $8.8 Million in Total Sales with 100% of all Lots Sold

Artistic Installations to be Shown in Recently Discovered Labyrinth Beneath London's Waterloo Station

Miami International Art Fair, a New Unique Art Fair Model for the 21st Century

The Christian Stein Collection: A History of Italian Art at the Valencian Institute of Modern Art

Exhibition of New Paintings by Sandra Lerner on Display at June Kelly Gallery in New York

Model of Renzo Piano-Designed West Building Now on View at the Kimbell Art Museum

An Impressive and Comprehensive Collection of Glorious Quilts Celebrate the "Year of the Quilt"

Suchan Kinoshita Exhibits at Museum Ludwig as Part of Winning Fine Arts Prize

Three Emerging London-Based Artists Present 'Transmission' at Haunch of Venison

Largest-Ever Exhibition in Scandinavia of the Work of Alice Neel at Moderna Museet Malmö

Deichtorhallen Hamburg Provides a Comprehensive Insight into the Art of Poul Gernes

Solo Show of Paintings by the American Artist Pat Steir at Galerie Jaeger Bucher

Local Collector's Estate Realizes Over $900,000 at Auction

Major 20th-Century Private Sculpture Collection Goes to Chazen Museum of Art

Picasso to Julie Mehretu: Modern Drawings from the British Museum Collection

Jericho Unveils a Massive 1,200-Year-Old Carpet Mosaic Measuring Nearly 900 Square Meters

Phillips Collection Names Klaus Ottmann Curator at Large

Galerie Michael Janssen Opens First Exhibition with Belgian Artist Joris Van de Moortel

SMU's Meadows and Prado Museum Officials Sign Partnership Agreement in Madrid

Jonas Lipps' "Available Material of the Necessary Time" at Klosterfelde

Christie's Rediscovers a Rare 17th Century Set of Silver Playing Cards to Be Sold in October




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