BOWNESS-ON-WINDERMERE.- Laura Ford is one of Britains most original sculptors and is well-known for her portrayals of animals, through which she explores aspects of the human condition although, in fact, Ford describes her own work as sculptures dressed as people who are dressed as animals. Deploying a nightmarish imagination she uses humour and acute observation to engage with social and political issues. This exhibition was originally conceived by Stephen Feeke, Director of the New Art Centre, Roche Court, for Strawberry Hill House, and has been reconfigured with additional content selected by Lakeland Arts in close collaboration with the artist.
Fords work sits particularly well in domestic interiors, as witnessed in this shows previous incarnation in Strawberry Hills fabulously atmospheric Gothic spaces.
Blackwells warm, richly-carved Arts & Crafts rooms and Abbot Halls classically-proportioned Georgian galleries will provide a similarly perfect foil for Fords startling creations: works, such as the fur-clad Medieval Cloud Girls skulk in Abbot Halls opulent silk-lined Saloon, creating a somewhat less jubilant counterpoint to the dancing children in Romneys The Gower Family, while the tragic child soldiers, Armour Boys, lie crumpled in Blackwells baronial Main Hall and a shaggy bronze beast, Old Nick, plays a devilish tune by the fireplace in the Dining Room.
Expanding on the work from Strawberry Hill House, Ford will be showing a new series of sculptures that explore the dynamics of couples - their strengths, their weaknesses, their glory and their madness. The works are personal and particular but, at the same time, reference the historical couples represented in the sculpture and painting of ancient Greece and Rome, the Renaissance and the early twentieth century.
Outside, a series of recent bronze sculptures, Days of Judgement, take an early-Renaissance fresco, The Expulsion from the Garden of Eden by Masaccio, as their starting point. In Fords postlapsarian vision, however, the characters of Adam and Eve are reconfigured as a group of very tall, skinny cats. Pacing on the south lawn at Blackwell in various states of deep thought, these cats appear like a group of existential poets gripped by their own inner anxieties. The cats, prowling in the grounds against the spectacular backdrop of the Coniston fells, generate an atmosphere of courtliness but their featureless faces convey an uncanny blankness onto which we are able to project our own concerns. Elsewhere, it might appear that Beatrix Potters much-loved Lakeland characters have fallen on hard times, with a Mrs Tiggy-Winkle-like hedgehog transformed into a bronze bag lady, and a badger who has resorted to foraging in dustbins.
The exhibition will also highlight other aspects of Laura Fords practice such as her ceramic works, including Bear, In Remembrance and Needy Greedy, along with new ceramics made in direct response to Blackwell which fit brilliantly with Lakeland Arts collection of historic and contemporary pottery. This association is taken a step further through the artists series of prints inspired by the most celebrated of the Arts & Crafts ceramicists, William De Morgan, whose lustrous tiles adorn many of Blackwells fireplaces. This show will present other graphic works, in which Ford not only explores ideas and variations relating to her sculpture but also allows her imagination to run free, creating delicate line drawings and vivid watercolours that exist as finished artworks in their own right.