DUBLIN.- Kerlin Gallery presents Art School, an exhibition of new paintings and photographs by Paul Winstanley.
During the Summer months of 2011 and 2012 Paul Winstanley photographed the empty fine art studio spaces of Art Schools throughout England, Scotland and Wales. The artist abided by certain governing rules; the camera was held at the same height for each shot, the studio was photographed as found and the lighting was natural. The result is a comprehensive photographic archive of previously overlooked and undocumented sites of creative potential. This archive has given rise to a truly remarkable body of paintings and a new photographic publication.
The paintings in this exhibition, drawn from his photographs, closely subscribe to this minimal experience of place that is both documentary and sublime. They describe place and yet become, themselves, objects of space defined as much by the transience of light on surfaces as place articulated. Painted on panel, they physically reflect the hard surfaces of walls and screens within the imagery and re live the memory of place as both illusion and object. The visual language approaches abstraction and yet these paintings never lose sight of their social and political content.
Paul Winstanley, born in Manchester in 1954, now lives and works in London. He has been exhibiting since the late 1970s and over the past two decades he has had regular solo exhibitions in London, Paris, Munich, New York, L.A., and Hamburg. His first retrospective was held at the Auckland Art Space in New Zealand in 2008 and was accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. Other solo shows include 'Driven Landscapes' 1993 at Camden Arts Centre, London and 'Annexe', Tate Britain, 1998.
Recent group shows include Window to the World, Fondation de l'Hermitage, Lausanne (2013) and Museo Cantonale d'arte and Museo d'arte, Lugano (2012); Lifelike, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis and The Deer, Le Consortium, Dijon (2012); Out of focus. After Gerhard Richter, Kunsthalle Hamburg (2011); Sea Fever: From Turner to today, Southampton City Art Gallery (2010); Terror and the Sublime: Art in an Age of Anxiety, Crawford Art Gallery, Cork (2009); Conflict Tales: Subjectivity, Burger Collection Berlin (2009); Self as Selves Irish Museum of Modern Art Dublin (2009); Inside Architecture, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2008); and 8 Visions, One Dream, Today Art Museum, Bejing (2008).
Winstanley's work is represented in numerous public and private collections, including the collections of The Irish Museum of Modern Art, Tate Gallery, British Council, European Parliament, New York City Public Library and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.