THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY – CORNELIA PARKER PHOTOGRAVURE
British artist Cornelia Parker is widely known for her stunning transformations of the ordinary into the extraordinary – using printmaking and photogravure to produce something elusive and ephemeral.
Alan Cristea, Director of Cristea Roberts Gallery, comments; “Parker’s new body of work, on which she has been working through the pandemic, is aptly called Through a Glass Darkly, the words of St Paul which suggest an obscure vision of reality. What we can’t see clearly now will eventually become evident and the artist has indeed presented us with a world of domestic objects and flora in the first stages of emergence from a ghostly past. She has breathed life into dead flowers and animated glassware as they struggle to shed their shadows.”
Over 25 new works appear for the first time in Cristea Roberts current exhibition Through a Glass Darkly. The subject matter of these new works includes salt cellars; sugar bowls; medicine bottles; carafes; glassware; thistles, gerbera with decapitated heads and crushed forget-me-nots.
The photogravure process is part of Parker’s career long fascination with taking the recognisable, and pushing it to a point of abstraction. This slow, contemplative method of printing creates an effect on some of the monochrome prints that is almost painterly, as items blur in and out of focus.
Mysterious and unusual shadows appear, wine glass stems appear to evaporate (Nightfall, 2020), a glass jug overlaying a large glass negative of a coffeepot becomes trompe oeil, as the silver pot now appears to sit within a jug (Here and There and Now and Then, 2020), and two glasses and a carafe filled with red wine become a dark abstract composition (Eclipse, 2020).
Parker also plays with dualities. In this exhibition she revisits the subject of a 2016 work entitled, Coffee Pot Hit by a Monkey Wrench, a photogravure of a glass photographic negative of an antique silver coffee pot that Parker smashed with a monkey wrench. Parker has sellotaped the smashed photographic negative back together to make a new print called Coffee Pot Hit by a Monkey Wrench (repaired), 2020.
A line of empty glass medicine bottles is pictured in Still Life (Sans Medicine), 2020. For a corresponding print, entitled Still Life (Verso), 2020, Parker captures the shadows of the labels by turning the bottles over. Parker reactivates these objects to create spectral still lives.
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