jennifer laracy
  • home
  • ABOUT
    • CONTACT
  • PROPOSAL
  • portfolio
    • He Momo, nā te whānau—it’s a family trait— The 2nd Aotearoa Jewellery Triennial
    • PARURE, SEASON, 2025
    • Indicating Right Turning Left 2025
    • A fast game is a good game, 2024
    • Aotearoa Art Fair SEASON 2024
    • Offering it up 2022,2025
    • KAIKAINGA NGĀ TARINGA, 2023
    • Pāua: A Contemporary Jewellery Story, 2022
    • WHANUI 2022
    • Souvenir II, Fingers,2022
    • Souvenir of a Souvenir 2020
    • Redecorating Taranaki 2021
    • TE AO HURI HURI, London, 2018
    • DRESSER 2018
    • ECHO ECHO 2018
    • ANIMAL FARM 2018
    • WE MAKE SACRIFICES HERE 2017
    • POLARITY
    • THE MAN AND THE MOUNTAIN 2018
    • Motherlode 2016
    • Horizontal heritage 2015
    • Flotsam and jetsam 2014
    • Fountainhead 2014
    • The last of the milk and honey 2013
    • Boat Anchor 2015
    • The Distant Shore 2015
  • C V / exhibition list
  • BLOG
    • BLOG Handshake 4
    • BLOG, KOTUKU TOUR, 2018
  • ARCHIVE
    • rings
    • earrings
    • BADGE MAKING
    • bodies of work
    • of the colony
    • graduate work
    • plasticwork
    • pins
    • penknives
    • birds

Barbican Center - the Curve gallery

10/26/2018

0 Comments

 
Francis Upritchard - Wetwang Slack
Wetwang Slack was an Iron age burial ground where skeletal remains where found buried within chariots, many of the finds from the site are now housed in the British museum. the title could suggest an archaeological discovery in the form off an overview of the artists material practice. the show progresses through Francis new figurative sculptural textile works to floating shelves stacked with decorated hats of all shapes and sizes some truly beautiful glass urns, brightly colored polymer clay and ceramics. 
Picture
Upritchards floating shelves of decorated felt hats
Picture
the artists beautiful glass vessels depicting fauna and mythical figures
Positioned at the end of the show were her works made with a Brazilian rubber called balata. This is wild rubber and is exclusively collected  processed by natural methods and crafted by expert hands in and around the artisan communities of Belem in Brazil.
Amazingly Upritchard has been given permission to work with with this incredible material and has been since 2004  during a residency in Belem 
where she met the De Oliveria Pinto who expertly manages the extraction process. The Balata figures a melding of myth and history are all limbs and movement, the sculptures convey a sense of being stretchy true to its materiality. The work on a whole for me had a newness to it a brilliant mythical and jumble of object and adornment. The way the works progressed made for a really wonderful sense of discovery.
The artists has sought to extend the bounds of her sculptural craft In a very material responsive and visceral way. 
This kind of reinterpretation of artifacts could be likened to the fetishistic souvenir. Like a fantasized vision of an ancient culture. This show and my initial experience of the British Museum for are very much entwined, I can imagine Upritchards works infiltrating, hovering above and about alongside the collections in the Enlightenment Gallery.
Picture
these figures reference Ashinaga-tenaga (translated as Long Legs and Long Arms) who are characters who are part of Japanese mythology
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Author

    Jennifer Laracy

    Archives

    November 2018
    October 2018