LONDON.- Richard Saltoun Gallery announced representation of the Estate of British artist Shelagh Wakely (1932 - 2011). A retrospective of the artist, entitled A View from a Window, will be held at
Camden Arts Centre 13 July 28 September.
Primarily known for her large-scale installations and public commissions from the 1990s, Wakely established her career in the 1970s. Working in all mediums, she left behind a significant body of paintings, drawings, collages, videos, clay sculptures, ceramics and numerous installations. The exhibition at Camden is developed by the Brazilian artist Tunga, a close friend and collaborator of the artist, and will seek to capture and convey the temporal shifts and ephemeral magic in her work.
Although Shelagh Wakely was awarded several museum shows in the UK during her lifetime, it was in Brazil that she received the most acclaim. Her art held a real affinity to the Brazilian conceptual tradition, with its emphasis on temporary work that would be effected by the natural elements, (rain, water, earth, wind) and working in soft materials like cloth, silk, gold leaf, calico and spices.
The exhibition at Camden Arts Centre will take place in all the galleries together with the garden and will highlight the breadth of media used by Wakely.
Gallery 2 will feature her most famous installation, created at the British School of Rome, called curcuma sul travertino, 1991. This vast installation comprises loose tumeric scattered in baroque patterns on the floor. The resulting installation is both delicate in material form but dense in its olfactory presence. Wakelys interest in the simple fragility of materials is echoed in later works, in which she experimented with organic matter and the natural process of decay. She would wrap fruits in gold leaf and allow them to rot and evaporate, leaving delicate empty gold shells
The influence of Brazilian artist and friend Tunga is integral to the way her work developed. The pair met in 1989 at the Whitechapel Gallery, London, where Wakely was reviewing his exhibition. This meeting marked a turning point in her practice. The pair began collaborating together, with many of the their works incorporating video and performance. Her later career, from the mid-1990s onwards, was dominated by these collaborative works and the impact Brazil had on her. Additionally these years were dominated by a succession of international architectural and public commissions, including the 2001 commission to design a mosaic for the South Porch, Royal Albert Hall, London.
Shelagh Wakelys death in 2011 marked the end of an astonishingly rich and diverse career: Richard Saltoun is proud to have the opportunity to bring her work to the forefront of the contemporary art world.
Shelagh Wakely was a pioneer of installation art. Born in the small village of Madingley, Cambridgeshire, in 1932, Wakely spent much of her youth in Kenya where her family lived a privileged colonial life. She returned to England as a teenager to study agriculture, but quickly turned to the arts, studying painting and screen-printing at the Chelsea College of Art (1958-1962). Wakely worked as a textile and clothing designer through the 1960s but a research fellowship at the Royal College of Art (1968-1971) led her to turn to sculpture. Early exhibitions were held at the Serpentine Gallery, London, (1977); ICA, London, (1979) and John Hansard Gallery, Southampton (1982). These shows cemented her reputation as a multifaceted artist: installations, sculptures, drawings and paintings all incorporated across the breadth of her practice.
Later landmark exhibitions include The British School at Rome, 1991, where she was a Fellow, IKON Gallery, Birmingham, 1992; Museu do Acude, Rio de Janeiro, 1993; and an outdoor installations, Rainsquare installed at the South London Gallery in 1994 and Angel Row Gallery, Nottingham, 2002.
Public commissions include: Royal Albert Hall, London, 2001, Marunouchi Building, Tokyo 2002, Beckenham Beacon Hospital, Kent, 2009, and Nottingham University Hospital City Campus, Nottingham, 2010.