Nathaniel Rackowe 'Black Shed Expanded' opens at Parasol unit, London
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Nathaniel Rackowe 'Black Shed Expanded' opens at Parasol unit, London
Nathaniel Rackowe, Black Shed Expanded, 2014 / 2016. Timber shed, fluorescent lights and fittings, bitumen, paint, steel. 240 x 220 x 220 cm. Edition 2 of 2 (2016). Courtesy of the artist.



LONDON.- Parasol unit foundation for contemporary art is presenting Black Shed Expanded, 2014/2016, an extraordinary light sculpture by London-based artist Nathaniel Rackowe. This work is the 2016 addition to the Parasol stice – Winter Light series, for which Parasol unit invites a contemporary artist to exhibit a work that addresses the phenomenon of light.

Displayed on the foundation’s terrace throughout the months of winter, Nathaniel Rackowe’s large-scale urban shed structure is installed, seemingly mid-explosion, upside-down, its contours wrenched apart, exposing its illuminated interior. The wooden shed, painted with black bitumen, emanates an eerie acid-yellow glow from the white striplighting inside it reflecting off the painted walls of its interior. The structure appears to be exploding, as if it is being split apart by the force of the light within it. Rackowe says, ‘I thought it would be interesting to take the humble shed and elevate it so it can rise up and challenge architecture and also deconstruct it to the point where you are forced to re-read it.’ Although a direct reference to the ubiquity of garden sheds throughout the suburbs of London, the work has an equally universal impact in its depiction of such a familiar, domestic structure.

Rackowe often combines elements of light and movement, the crucial components of his practice. Essentially inspired by the urban environment, the primary impetus behind his works is the growth and shifting nature of a city. He uses recognisable urban infrastructure and industrial products, such as scaffolding poles or breeze blocks, and in this instance a garden shed. After deconstructing the idea of a structure he rebuilds it tangibly with the added element of light. The intention is to recreate the experience of being in and moving through an urban environment with particular emphasis on in-between spaces, where light fluctuates from negative to positive. Each material he selects ‘carries specific associations’, which are reiterated through his distortion of their intended function.

Inspired by constructivist and deconstructivist artists such as Vladimir Tatlin, Richard Serra, and Gordon MattaClark, Rackowe’s works also pay particular homage to the artists Donald Judd and Dan Flavin. Similarly, Rackowe uses mass-produced industrial materials together with the element of light to create contemporary monuments that enliven our urban reality.

Nathaniel Rackowe, born 1975 in Cambridge, currently lives and works in London. He studied at Sheffield Hallam University, achieving a BA Hons Fine Art (Sculpture) in 1998. In 2001, he earned an MFA Sculpture from The Slade School of Fine Art, University College London, having gained an Arts and Humanities Research Board Award for postgraduate study. He was awarded a Boise Travel Scholarship in 2003 and had his first solo show in 2004 at the GardenFresh Gallery, Chicago, USA. In that same year he also received the Stanhope Fellowship, which led to his Stanhope solo exhibition in the Serpentine Pavilion, London, in 2005. In that same year he showed Shift at Bischoff/Weiss, London, where he went on to present three further solo shows. Since then he has participated widely in group and solo exhibitions around the world, including in Bangkok, China, Colombia, Europe, Korea, Thailand, the USA, and most recently in Dubai, where his solo exhibition Radiant Trajectory was shown at Lawrie Shabibi in 2015. His work is in a number of private and public collections, including the UK Government Art Collection; MONA|Museum of Old and New Art, Tasmania, Australia; Museum of Modern Art, Lima, Peru; Jumex Collection, Mexico; and CIFO|Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation, Miami, USA. Rackowe has also had artist residencies in Hull (2005) and the Forest of Dean (2006) in the UK; in Bangkok (2006); Beirut, Lebanon (2009); and Copenhagen, Denmark (2012).

Rackowe has undertaken a number of public sculpture projects, including RP3 at the Economist Plaza in London (2007); Spin in Lima, Peru (2010) and Black Shed Expanded at the Village Royal, Paris (2014). He participated in Lumiere¸ the annual Light Festival in Durham (2013), and in House of the Nobleman’s Light Fantastic in London (2014) . In January 2016, he participated in Lumiere London .










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