LONDON.- Parasol unit presents a newly commissioned work by Scottish artist Charles Avery as its Parasol stice Winter Light 2015 project. Charles Averys Tree N o. 5 (from the Jadindagadendar) is the latest addition to the ongoing Winter Light series, for which Parasol unit invites a contemporary artist to create an installation that addresses the phenomenon of light.
In 2004, Charles Avery embarked upon his evolving lifelong project, The Islanders, which describes in meticulous detail the inhabitants, flora and fauna of an imaginary island. In a constantly growing body of work (including drawing, sculpture and film), Avery explores and records in precise detail the customs, myths, religions and rituals of T he Islanders . Four years into the process, in 2008, Avery was offered a solo exhibition at Parasol unit, which toured to the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, and to Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam. Tree N o. 5 (from the Jadindagadendar ) is a new and single work, jointly commissioned by Edinburgh Art Festival and Parasol unit, London.
Towering five metres tall and cast in bronze, Charles Averys Tree No. 5 (from the Jadindagadendar) will illuminate the outdoor terrace at Parasol unit from 15 October 6 December 2015. Drawing inspiration for its design from mathematics (such as the square root of 2 and the Fibonacci sequence) Averys tree, ripe with fluorescent fruit hanging from its bronze branches, is from the Jadindagadendar, a municipal park in the town of Onomatopo eia at the heart of the artists fictional island. The park is filled, not with living botanical specimens but with artificial trees, flowers and shrubs, which express the Islanders refutation of nature. Avery considers these artificial objects to be souvenirs brought to our world by a visitor to the Island.
The sculpture, Tree No. 5 (from the Jadindagadendar), was first unveiled on 30 July 2015 at Waverley Station, Edinburgh, as part of Parasol Public and the commission project, The Improbable City, Edinburgh Art Festival.
Born 1973 in Oban, Scotland, Charles Avery now lives and works in London. In 2007, Avery represented Scotland at the 52nd Venice Biennale. He participated in the British Art Show 7 and Folkestone Triennial in 2011, and was included in the 2014 Taipei Biennial, The Great Acceleration: Art in the Anthropocene, curated by Nicolas Bourriaud. In that same year, Avery exhibited in the National Gallery of Modern Art as part of the GENERATION project, which celebrated 25 years of contemporary art in Scotland. In early 2015, the Gemeente Museum in the Netherlands showcased works from the last five years of Charles Averys project, The Islanders .
Tree No. 5 (from the Jadindagadendar), 2015, is jointly commissioned by Edinburgh Art Festival and Parasol unit foundation for contemporary art.