Migrations
2 February-3 March 2017
“Migrations” explores themes of location, migration, and diaspora through an installation of mixed-media works that include drawing, book art and collage. The migratory aspect of ideas and material is expressed in images and artists’ books that re-purpose data from various found sources in order to construct new visual and metaphorical narratives.
Déirdre Kelly’s collaged nautical charts and altered maps (image above) highlight the plight of contemporary migrants. Of Irish descent and based in Venice, Kelly’s work has often dwelt on ideas of location and dislocation. “Wonder Atlas-Sicily 2012” traces the fraught sea journeys taken by refugees towards Italy. By representing people in the image as beans, Kelly makes a wry comment on how migrants are seen only as financial ‘units’ to their traffickers.
Tracey Bush’s plant studies and cut paper assemblages reference traditions of botanicals and herbariums that stretch back to the Middle Ages. Combining scientifically-accurate specimen drawings with collaged elements from consumer packing, Bush articulates an entirely contemporary comment upon man’s increasingly fragile relationship with Nature.
Rachael Clewlow documents with meticulous attention the ways in which she inhabits the landscape: recording routes she takes, landmarks she observes, the times and dates of her journeys. Translating information from the small “statistical diaries” she keeps, Clewlow creates intricately layered visual images–abstract forms that reflect the patterns of her own mobility.
Julie Cockburn introduces new elements to found images by collaging, stitching or overpainting the original. Working with source material that includes reproductions of historical portraits, mid-twentieth-century advertising photography, and printed book pages, her interventions generate compelling dialogues about time and identity.
Hormazd Narielwalla uses found materials to create works that explore the body and cultural identity. “The Lost Gardens” series originate in the memory of a rose garden in his childhood home of Pune, India, and are worked over the templates of bespoke, paper tailoring patterns. Collaged elements read as geometric mazes and pathways, inviting thoughts about involuntarily scattered populations who take their trades with them to new countries.
The exhibition launches two new limited edition artist’s books: Dusk by Tracey Bush, and Lost Gardens by Hormazd Narielwalla.
(adapted from the gallery’s press materials)
INFORMATION
Eagle Gallery
159 Farringdon Road
London EC1R 3AL United Kingdom
+ 44 (0) 207 833 2674
Hours:
Wednesday-Friday, 11AM-6PM
Saturday, 11AM-4PM during exhibitions
Image:
Sicily from “Wonder Atlas”
by Déirdre Kelly
2012
Courtesy of the artist