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The Belly And The Members: Group Exhibition Curated by Antonia Marsh

past exhibition
5 - 23 September 2017 Gallery Exhibitions
  • Text
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Press
Text
Claire Barrow | Sid Charity | Rayvenn Shaleigha D’Clark | Michael Genovese | Jack Greer | Chase Hall | Alba Hodsoll | Louis Morlet | Olu Ogunnaike | Hamish Pearch | Photocopy Club | Matilde Soes Rasmussen | Bennet Schlesinger | Will Spratley | Emma Thomas |  Laura Watters | Faye Wei Wei | Harley Weir | Nick van Woert 
 

The Belly and the Members brings together artistic positions from 20 international artists that visualise and present the fragmented body as a provocative field of inquiry. Including work from a variety of media, the exhibition focuses on notions of fragmentation, dismemberment and decay specifically in relation to the human body and its inextricable psychological self. The Belly and the Members shares its title with an Aesop Fable from the 6th century BC wherein the extremities, or ‘members’, of the body go on strike in defiance of the belly who they believe to be greedily taking all the food; until they themselves weaken to the point of realisation that they cannot survive alone. The discernment that “all must work together or the body will go to pieces” becomes an allegory for a symbiotic reliance on reciprocal interrogation between artworks.

 

The Belly and the Members posits that the ontology of an artwork has much in common with the body: responding to pressures, meeting projected expectations and as an outward expression of an inner self whose surface remains a sensitive terrain susceptible to exterior traumas. As our interface with an external world, individually we each relate to the experience of inhabiting a body; but once dissembled, fragmented bodies stand collectively as analogies for our increasingly disparate society and global territories more generally. Living in what has been referred to as a “post-truth” world, the boundaries between fiction and reality come under scrutiny as artists compel a self-reflective reassessment of the political as well as the personal.

 

Cracks, orifices and protrusions permeate the gallery space in cathartic gestures that range from violent to sensual; mirroring Hans Bellmer’s interpretation of the body as an anagram of interconnecting parts that can be endlessly reconfigured to explore or expose desire and other unconscious impulses. Bodily binaries similarly abound, as works investigate the wider implications of interior versus exterior, micro versus macro, hard versus soft and wet versus dry. The use of unexpected, perishable materials functions as a pivotal reminder of our inevitable decay and degeneration and such an acknowledgement of the artist’s self- conscious fragility precludes any pretence of a stable reality based on outward appearances, deliberately unhinging the viewer’s grasp on perception. In the interest of engendering an expanded awareness of what constitutes a representation of the body, The Belly and the Members includes works where human forms are asserted simply through specific characteristics or behavioural tendencies, and even implied precisely in their absence.

 

Aside from dissecting their material associations, The Belly and the Members posits that artistic process can also seem bodily. Whether made through a build up of layers, time-consuming performative action, reductive sculpting techniques, the application of physical pressure, chemical experimentation or biological deposits; the process behind each work does not simply constitute a means to an end, but can extend and complicate the meaning of the final artwork as the end-in-itself. Palpability of process and acknowledgement of source material in this way further affirms these artworks’ bodily constitutions: living and developing as organisms in their own right. Similarly, at Cob Gallery an exhibition becomes a metaphor for a living and developing body of works that while existing autonomously, together establish a unified and functioning organism that can host the growth, exchange and decay of ideas. Informed by works that examine the revelatory potential of corporeal fragmentation and dissection, this metaphor that posits The Belly and the Members as a living body reverberates through exhibition content, organisation and display. 

Works
  • Jack Greer Lawn Enforcement, 2017 Pen and oil paint on canvas 914.5 Ø mm
    Jack Greer
    Lawn Enforcement, 2017
    Pen and oil paint on canvas
    914.5 Ø mm
  • Jack Greer Personal Satisfaction, 2017 Pen and oil paint on canvas 914.5 Ø mm
    Jack Greer
    Personal Satisfaction, 2017
    Pen and oil paint on canvas
    914.5 Ø mm
  • Chase Hall John Henry, 2016 19th century worktable varnish on linen 600 x 400 mm
    Chase Hall
    John Henry, 2016
    19th century worktable varnish on linen
    600 x 400 mm
  • Hamish Pearch Everyday, 2017 Oats 300 x 200 x 120 mm
    Hamish Pearch
    Everyday, 2017
    Oats
    300 x 200 x 120 mm
  • Hamish Pearch Blocker I, 2017 Sesame seeds, resin, aluminum 300 x 420 mm
    Hamish Pearch
    Blocker I, 2017
    Sesame seeds, resin, aluminum
    300 x 420 mm
  • Hamish Pearch Blocker II, 2017 Sesame seeds, resin, aluminum 420 x 300 mm
    Hamish Pearch
    Blocker II, 2017
    Sesame seeds, resin, aluminum
    420 x 300 mm
  • Will Spratley Pose I, 2017 Wax 700 x 70 x 140 mm
    Will Spratley
    Pose I, 2017
    Wax
    700 x 70 x 140 mm
  • Laura Watters The Secret World of Alex Mack, 2017 Vinyl fabric, mesh wire, staples, and spray paint on wood panel 127 x 178 mm
    Laura Watters
    The Secret World of Alex Mack, 2017
    Vinyl fabric, mesh wire, staples, and spray paint on wood panel
    127 x 178 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei I bit him in places where his skin was exposed, so that his mother would suspect that he had a lover, 2017 Oil on canvas 335 x 284 mm Framed
    Faye Wei Wei
    I bit him in places where his skin was exposed, so that his mother would suspect that he had a lover, 2017
    Oil on canvas
    335 x 284 mm Framed
  • Claire Barrow Liv's Bust, 2017 Mixed media 590 x 460 x 100 mm
    Claire Barrow
    Liv's Bust, 2017
    Mixed media
    590 x 460 x 100 mm
  • Olu Ogunnaike Placemaking, 2017 Resin, wood 10 individual works, dimensions variable
    Olu Ogunnaike
    Placemaking, 2017
    Resin, wood
    10 individual works, dimensions variable
  • Emma Thomas Sakura, 2017 Silicone Dimensions variable
    Emma Thomas
    Sakura, 2017
    Silicone
    Dimensions variable
  • Rayvenn Shaleigha D'Clark Untitled, 2016 Mixed media 80 x 230 x 200 mm
    Rayvenn Shaleigha D'Clark
    Untitled, 2016
    Mixed media
    80 x 230 x 200 mm
  • Bennet Schlesinger Equilibrium 6, 2016 Alabaster 170 x 150 x 70 mm
    Bennet Schlesinger
    Equilibrium 6, 2016
    Alabaster
    170 x 150 x 70 mm
  • Bennet Schlesinger Equilibrium 5, 2016 Alabaster 150 x 110 x 60 mm
    Bennet Schlesinger
    Equilibrium 5, 2016
    Alabaster
    150 x 110 x 60 mm
  • Nick van Woert Untitled (David), 2015 Nickel plated electroformed copper on plastic statue and steel shelf 330 x 153 x 114 mm, shelf 153 x 318 x 304 mm
    Nick van Woert
    Untitled (David), 2015
    Nickel plated electroformed copper on plastic statue and steel shelf
    330 x 153 x 114 mm, shelf 153 x 318 x 304 mm
  • Harley Weir Painting, 2017 Handprint 1000 x 815 mm
    Harley Weir
    Painting, 2017
    Handprint
    1000 x 815 mm
  • Harley Weir Painting, 2017 Handprint 1000 x 815 mm
    Harley Weir
    Painting, 2017
    Handprint
    1000 x 815 mm
  • Harley Weir Painting, 2017 Handprint 1000 x 815 mm
    Harley Weir
    Painting, 2017
    Handprint
    1000 x 815 mm
  • Michael Genovese Manicured Fields of Failure, 2013 Nickel-plated steel 2400 x 1400 mm
    Michael Genovese
    Manicured Fields of Failure, 2013
    Nickel-plated steel
    2400 x 1400 mm
  • Michael Genovese Two Crooked Lines, 2013 Nickel-plated steel 2700 x 1400 mm
    Michael Genovese
    Two Crooked Lines, 2013
    Nickel-plated steel
    2700 x 1400 mm
  • Matilde Soes Rasmussen The Shell C-type print 845 x 915 mm
    Matilde Soes Rasmussen
    The Shell
    C-type print
    845 x 915 mm
  • Sid Charity Untitled, 2017 Metal structure 1940 x 1020 x 960 mm
    Sid Charity
    Untitled, 2017
    Metal structure
    1940 x 1020 x 960 mm
Installation Views
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 1
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 4
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 3
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 10
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 8
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 9
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 6
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 7
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 11
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 12
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 13
  • Cob Belly 4 Sep 2017 14
Press
  • Inside the exhibition deconstructing the decaying human body

    Thalia Chin, Hero Magazine, September 6, 2017
  • oversized condoms and more at the belly and the members exhibition

    Antonia Marsh, i-D, September 5, 2017
  • Antonia Marsh’s Show Explores The Fragmented, Decaying Body

    Thea Bichard, Dazed Digital, September 4, 2017
  • Inside curator Antonia Marsh’s body centric group show

    Bryony Stone, It's Nice That, September 4, 2017
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