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NEW WORK PART III: SUBJECT: Group Exhibition

past exhibition
3 October - 3 November 2018 Gallery Exhibitions
  • Text
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Press
Text
Eve Ackroyd | Juno Calypso | Jessica Craig-Martin | Katrien De Blauwer | Nina Mae Fowler | Roxanne Jackson | Cathy Lomax | Juliette Mahieux-Bartoli | Aksiniya Misuta | Cristina Planas | Alex Prager | Rhiannon Salisbury | Stephanie Sarley | Nicole Wittenberg | Faye Wei Wei
 

“Beauty will be convulsive or not at all ... Convulsive beauty will be veiled-erotic, fixed-explosive, magic-circumstantial or not at all.” - Andre Breton

“She has to survey everything she is and everything she does because how she appears to others, and ultimately how she appears to men, is of crucial importance for what is normally thought of as success in her life. Her own sense of being in herself is supplanted by a sense of being appreciated as herself by another…”  - John Berger - Ways of Seeing


Cob Gallery is proud to present NEW WORK PART III: SUBJECT. The exhibition is the third instalment in a series of group shows programmed across 2018. Following on from both FORM and MATERIAL earlier in the year, SUBJECT marks the continuation of a series format partly inspired by the work of curator Richard Bellamy at Green Gallery, New York. Between 1960-1965, Bellamy chose to exhibit the work of emerging artists who were redefining and questioning what art was while also taking it in new directions.  

NEW WORK PART III: SUBJECT investigates the paradoxes and ambiguities which arise between constructions of beauty and latent violence. Seduction, glamour and repulsion are all significant themes among the work of an international roster of 15 emerging and established female artists. So too is the ‘female gaze’, an idea developing on that of the ‘male gaze’, identified and defined by film theorist Laura Mulvey in her seminal essay ‘Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema’. According to this idea, representations of the female form have historically been determined by male desire and power. In the process, the feminine role has been reduced to one of passivity and pleasure.

The works in this show directly confront many of the ironies and hypocrisies presented by the male gaze in art. Along the way, they raise different questions about what a female gaze might actually mean. Captured behind a scrim of nostalgia, classicism, romance and veneers of glamour, these female artists challenge historical male objectification and the infinite play of female mutability by this very act of questioning and critique.

The works and artists in NEW WORK PART III: SUBJECT are connected by the gestural motif of the hand. The hand’s position in loaded representations of the female form are explored as a way of activating and unpacking tensions between the female and male gaze. As a motif, the female hand has often had a charged status as a metonym for temptation, pleasure and the spontaneous, almost accidental endowment of women with sexual allure. In this exhibition, ambiguous or fetishistic presentations of the hand provocatively challenge the active and passive roles expounded in Mulvey’s theory.

The origins of the female hand gesture as a catalyst for male temptation can be found in the biblical story of Adam and Eve. Over the centuries, this story and its many misogynistic interpretations have defined the image of woman in Western civilisation, forming a bedrock of the social and political relationship of the sexes, underpinning our perceptions of sex and gender and thereby influencing how both women and men are represented in art and culture. Eve’s immortalised image is often found holding or presenting the forbidden fruit to her male counterpart. This action, which has come to define her legacy, has successfully been used to presented ideologically-founded ‘truths’ about women as universally valid. In this way, a simple gestural motif is profoundly implicated in the whole history of restrictions on the social, sexual, religious, political, and economic freedom of women.

Another germ of the exhibition arises from a photograph taken by Lee Miller in 1930. ‘Untitled (Exploding Hand)’ is a work that is as mysterious as it is revealing, taken in front of the Guerlain parfumerie in Paris (the ‘exploding’ effect is due to the scratching of the glass of the door by countless diamond rings). With it, Miller achieved that ‘convulsive beauty’ identified by André Breton as the hallmark of Surrealist art, marking the surrealist commitment to compromising traditional aesthetics by shocking audiences with a range of unspeakable human expressions: hysteria, obscenity, pornography, and violence. As the conceptual artist Richard Wentworth has put it, in Miller’s photograph ‘the visual noise and the abrasive contrast to the sexual metaphor of grasping a handle chase each other around in this picture.’ His analysis precisely locates the uneasy, latent violence that underpins the outwardly glamorous appearance of the image. Furthermore, Miller’s picture reads as a distinct confrontation with the male gaze, capturing a version of femininity that men weren’t prepared to see or accept, and which perhaps could only have been captured or observed by a woman.  

Throughout this exhibition, the works on display attempt to expose the falsehoods that underpin female objectification as they straddle the poles of attraction and repulsion. Fragile and unsustainable artifices of glamour are bolstered by the images of women preserved in the roles of ageing movie stars and fashion imagery, or works that examine the world of social elites through flawed beauty and stark reality.  Although these are works that have been produced by women, the male gaze in many ways continues to haunt the images, fraught with the dynamics of power in the representation of women by men. Various works on display probe for fresh ways to engage with art’s long history of sexualised images of women, by working from, appropriating, and indeed reversing the intent of the very imagery which has come to define the male gaze in culture – whether within cinema, fashion or pornography. Here, the female gaze acts as a filter to these subjects as a means to interrogate the phenomenon of the male gaze.  

Other works explore the notion of the female gaze by offering a mutually exclusive dialogue between the experience of femininity and the creative process, inviting the viewer to inhabit an emotional landscape intrinsic to the personal viewpoint of the female artist. Making women looking at men the focus of the work – or indeed making the female experience of the world the subject matter – these artists directly engage with versions of womanhood that challenge traditions of the ‘muse’ in art.

Works
  • Alex Prager 10:58 am Bunker Hill and Eye #7 (Suicide) (Diptych), 2012 Pigment print 950 x 650 mm 450 x 500 mm
    Alex Prager
    10:58 am Bunker Hill and Eye #7 (Suicide) (Diptych), 2012
    Pigment print
    950 x 650 mm
    450 x 500 mm
  • Roxanne Jackson Stigmata Candle Holders, 2018 Ceramic, faux fur, glaze, luster, candle 290 x 240 x 180 mm (each)
    Roxanne Jackson
    Stigmata Candle Holders, 2018
    Ceramic, faux fur, glaze, luster, candle
    290 x 240 x 180 mm (each)
  • Rhiannon Salisbury Gucci Pre-Fall, 2018 Acrylic on canvas 300 x 450 mm
    Rhiannon Salisbury
    Gucci Pre-Fall, 2018
    Acrylic on canvas
    300 x 450 mm
  • Stephanie Sarley Untitled, 2016-2018 Video Edition of 5
    Stephanie Sarley
    Untitled, 2016-2018
    Video
    Edition of 5
  • Stephanie Sarley Untitled, 2017 Video Edition of 5
    Stephanie Sarley
    Untitled, 2017
    Video
    Edition of 5
  • Stephanie Sarley Juicy Fruits, 2016-2017 Video Edition of 5
    Stephanie Sarley
    Juicy Fruits, 2016-2017
    Video
    Edition of 5
  • Juno Calypso If you Can’t Live Without Me Then Why Aren’t You Dead Yet, 2016 Archival pigment print 762 x 508 mm (excluding frame) Edition 2 of 5
    Juno Calypso
    If you Can’t Live Without Me Then Why Aren’t You Dead Yet, 2016
    Archival pigment print
    762 x 508 mm (excluding frame)
    Edition 2 of 5
  • Juliette Mahieux-Bartoli XP -> (SPEC) X̅ YP* (X-bar theory), 2018 Oil on canvas 450 x 1280 mm (triptych)
    Juliette Mahieux-Bartoli
    XP -> (SPEC) X̅ YP* (X-bar theory), 2018
    Oil on canvas
    450 x 1280 mm (triptych)
  • Cathy Lomax Film Diary #70 (27.10.14 - 19.11.14), 2018 Oil on linen 1200 x 1100 mm
    Cathy Lomax
    Film Diary #70 (27.10.14 - 19.11.14), 2018
    Oil on linen
    1200 x 1100 mm
  • Nina Mae Fowler Red and White Carnations (Part I), 2018 Charcoal on paper 654 x 545 mm
    Nina Mae Fowler
    Red and White Carnations (Part I), 2018
    Charcoal on paper
    654 x 545 mm
  • Nina Mae Fowler Red and White Carnations (Part V), 2018 Charcoal on paper 654 x 545 mm
    Nina Mae Fowler
    Red and White Carnations (Part V), 2018
    Charcoal on paper
    654 x 545 mm
  • Nina Mae Fowler Red and White Carnations (Part IV), 2018 Charcoal on paper 654 x 545 mm
    Nina Mae Fowler
    Red and White Carnations (Part IV), 2018
    Charcoal on paper
    654 x 545 mm
  • Aksiniya Misyuta Absolute squeeze, 2018 Acrylic on canvas 200 x 150 mm
    Aksiniya Misyuta
    Absolute squeeze, 2018
    Acrylic on canvas
    200 x 150 mm
  • Nina Mae Fowler Bette, 2018 Pencil and graphite on gesso panel 1940 x 1210 mm
    Nina Mae Fowler
    Bette, 2018
    Pencil and graphite on gesso panel
    1940 x 1210 mm
  • Cristina Planas The Fissure, 2018 35mm slides, Simda 3200 carousel slide projector, continuous loop
    Cristina Planas
    The Fissure, 2018
    35mm slides, Simda 3200 carousel slide projector, continuous loop
  • Eve Ackroyd Window Seat, 2018 Oil on canvas 355 x 305 mm
    Eve Ackroyd
    Window Seat, 2018
    Oil on canvas
    355 x 305 mm
  • Eve Ackroyd Small Green Figure, 2018 Oil on canvas 305 x 255 mm
    Eve Ackroyd
    Small Green Figure, 2018
    Oil on canvas
    305 x 255 mm
  • Eve Ackroyd Nude with clouds, 2018 Oil on canvas 305 x 255 mm
    Eve Ackroyd
    Nude with clouds, 2018
    Oil on canvas
    305 x 255 mm
  • Katrien de Blauwer Single Cuts 111, 2016 Collage 375 x 300 mm (framed)
    Katrien de Blauwer
    Single Cuts 111, 2016
    Collage
    375 x 300 mm (framed)
  • Katrien de Blauwer Loin 10, 2016 Collage 375 x 300 mm (framed)
    Katrien de Blauwer
    Loin 10, 2016
    Collage
    375 x 300 mm (framed)
  • Aksiniya Misyuta Moonburnt, 2018 Acrylic on canvas 240 x 180 x 15 mm
    Aksiniya Misyuta
    Moonburnt, 2018
    Acrylic on canvas
    240 x 180 x 15 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei Where No Wax Is The Candle Shows It's Hairs, 2018 Oil monotype 740 x 585 mm (framed)
    Faye Wei Wei
    Where No Wax Is The Candle Shows It's Hairs, 2018
    Oil monotype
    740 x 585 mm (framed)
  • Faye Wei Wei Handfuls of Sun Boiling Over the Palms, 2018 Oil monotype 740 x 585 mm (framed)
    Faye Wei Wei
    Handfuls of Sun Boiling Over the Palms, 2018
    Oil monotype
    740 x 585 mm (framed)
  • Faye Wei Wei Touching My Eye Lids with Light Finger Tips, 2018 Oil monotype 740 x 585 mm (framed)
    Faye Wei Wei
    Touching My Eye Lids with Light Finger Tips, 2018
    Oil monotype
    740 x 585 mm (framed)
  • Jessica Craig-Martin On the Town, 2017 C-type print 840 x 1260 mm Edition 1/5
    Jessica Craig-Martin
    On the Town, 2017
    C-type print
    840 x 1260 mm
    Edition 1/5
  • Jessica Craig-Martin Fisted (Ralph Lauren 40th Anniversary Party, New York City), 2011 C-type print 838 x 1240 mm Edition 2/5
    Jessica Craig-Martin
    Fisted (Ralph Lauren 40th Anniversary Party, New York City), 2011
    C-type print
    838 x 1240 mm
    Edition 2/5
  • Jessica Craig-Martin Tye-Dye Prada Weiners (Mama Gina Sex Lecture, New York), 2004 C-type print 605 x 925 mm Edition 1/5
    Jessica Craig-Martin
    Tye-Dye Prada Weiners (Mama Gina Sex Lecture, New York), 2004
    C-type print
    605 x 925 mm
    Edition 1/5
  • Nicole Wittenberg Panty Dropper 2, 2015 Ink on paper 457 x 610 mm
    Nicole Wittenberg
    Panty Dropper 2, 2015
    Ink on paper
    457 x 610 mm
  • Nicole Wittenberg Untitled, 2015 Oil on canvas 1520 x 1820 mm
    Nicole Wittenberg
    Untitled, 2015
    Oil on canvas
    1520 x 1820 mm
  • Nicole Wittenberg Untitled, 2015 Oil on canvas 1520 x 1820 mm
    Nicole Wittenberg
    Untitled, 2015
    Oil on canvas
    1520 x 1820 mm
  • Nicole Wittenberg Untitled, 2015 Oil on canvas 1520 x 1820 mm
    Nicole Wittenberg
    Untitled, 2015
    Oil on canvas
    1520 x 1820 mm
  • Alex Prager Desiree, 2008 Pigment print 500 x 900 mm
    Alex Prager
    Desiree, 2008
    Pigment print
    500 x 900 mm
Installation Views
  • Cob Gallery Selects 87
  • Cob Gallery 50
  • Cob Gallery 24
  • Cob Gallery 18
  • Cob Gallery 47
  • Cob Gallery 12
  • Cob Gallery 49
  • Cob Gallery 70
  • Cob Gallery 68
  • Cob Gallery 69
  • Cob Gallery Selects 92
  • Cob Gallery 73
  • Cob Gallery 77
  • Cob Gallery Selects 90
  • Cob Gallery Front
  • Cob Gallery 58
  • Cob Gallery 59
  • Cob Gallery 57
Press
  • New Work Part III: SUBJECT

    Wall Street International, October 30, 2018
  • The Performance Artist Using Her Body to Channel Both Matador and Bull

    Emily Gosling, AnOther Magazine, October 30, 2018
  • Intimate and Sensual Collages Showing Different Views of Femininity

    Belle Hutton, AnOther Magazine, October 26, 2018
  • RHIANNON REBECCA SALISBURY

    Issey Scott, Floorr Magazine, October 2, 2018
  • The New Talent: Faye Wei Wei

    Telegraph Luxury, September 20, 2018

Related artist

  • Nina Mae Fowler

    Nina Mae Fowler

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