Sanctuary
presents the work of 10 international photo-artists exploring the
enduring image of the garden.
Since the birth of photography, photographers have
been drawn to horticulture and gardens for inspiration. Early photographic
experiments utilized botanical specimens; the end of the C19th saw
Pictorial Photographers emulating Victorian genre painting; and
early C20th colour photographers delighted in the splendors offered
by the herbaceous border. In recent years, however, photographers
have looked to explore the garden’s cultural and social associations
and meanings. The title of this exhibition is ironic. While the
combination of forms and styles - including rare early C20th works
- takes in a range of genre offering diverse perspectives collectively
they interrogate the myth and
idealization of the garden as a safe haven - for individuals, (particularly
women and children), wildlife, and even nature itself; as a controlled
place - where wild nature is contained by (horti)culture; and as
a utopian paradise - where horticultural and social perfection is
exalted.
Emma Barton – from the photographer who launched the Kodak
Girl, rare, early twentieth century autochromes and prints depict
the garden as domestic haven, where children are lost in a fantasy.
In Gina Glover’s two companion works (a B/W photographic
circular installation, and wall mounted colour works), nostalgia
and fantasy mingle to explore conflicting memories of a Northamptonshire.
garden.
Mark Edwards’ large scale colour photographs depict the ordinariness
of a neglected garden where nature is reasserting
its authority, and finds an alternative pictorial beauty.
Anna Fox spies through the hedges of village gardens,
challenging the illusion of the secure garden haven.
Sian Bonnell’s photographic sculptures depict the garden
as the stage for a surreal, carnivalesque reversal of natural order,
in which household cleaning agents escape towards a life in Nature.
Neeta Madahar – following critical acclaim at 2004 Arles
Photography Festival, three works from the Sustenance series, in
which the daily drama of birdlife captured in surreal luminosity
from the artist’s balcony window.
Keith Arnatt – one of Britain’s longstanding conceptual
artists, photographs every gardeners’ nightmare, dog shit
on the perfect lawn, to both hilarious and disturbing effect.
Ian Skoyles’ composite jigsaw photograph - combining approximately
three x 3,000 pieces, - contrives an horticulturally implausible
cottage garden, in which flowers from different environmental zones
and seasons are harmonized.
Using found sculpture, later photographed, Gérard Mermoz
dipicts the never represented episode from ‘The Fall’,
and invites us to carry the myth of Adam and Eve into new fictional
directions.
Claudia Faéhrenkemper’s startling, magnified images
of seeds appear as alien species waiting to drop on the unsuspecting
garden; reminding the viewer of the fragile tension between tamed
nature and the surrounding landscape.
With the exception of Emma Barton, all works are for sale.
Neeta Madahar, exhibited courtesy of Purdey Hicks Gallery, London,
Emma Barton, exhibited courtesy of Birmingham Central Library.
Gallery open
2-6pm Saturdays
2-6pm Sundays
or by appointment during exhibition dates.
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