FIONA CURRAN: OPEN SKY
SEPT 1 - NOV 16, 2024
Ursula K. LeGuin, Hymn to Time
Open Sky, a new solo exhibition by British artist Fiona Curran, takes inspiration from the gallery’s courtyard space which enables a close relationship with the sky, one that highlights the subtle interactions between the architectural surroundings and the light of the changing seasons. Reflecting on the double meaning in Chinese philosophy of tian (天) as both sky and also cosmos, Curran’s works - and the processes involved in their making – invite access to different modes of time and attentiveness to what remains of the everyday beyond the spaces of the screen. They explore slow or vacant time, inner contemplation and drifting states of consciousness where the sky becomes both the physical space of the earth’s atmosphere, subject to changing light conditions and weather patterns, but also a metaphorical space between visible and invisible worlds terrestrial and celestial.
In Curran’s work colour is an affirmation of presence and the act of noticing. It is spatial, material, rhythmic and spiritual, revealing the artist’s intimate connections to place and her engagement with the more-than-human world found in her everyday encounters with plants, trees, animals, insects and weather. Colour is gathered and patched together in densely stitched layers of painted cloth and dyed fabrics. In these works, colour suggests the elusiveness of sensory experience and inner moments of illumination: dappled light over eyelids, shadows from a tree in summer, the welcome warmth of a winter sun; smudged fingerprints on a perfect black glass surface; clouds passing over water; a breeze felt on the skin, a head that aches, the body as barometer.
Several works resemble quilt-like forms as painted cloths are pieced and patched together. These paintings maintain their softness, their creases and folds, their raw edges and frays. Quilts offer enclosed worlds that have a direct relationship with the body. In the process of their making, as fabrics are stitched together, cloth drapes over the legs or lap and is supported by the maker’s arms as material is gathered and held in the hands. This bodily connection then extends to the quilt’s traditional use as a covering for the body. Quilts are givers of warmth, comfort and protection, they offer recovery and shelter, they connect to acts of sleep, rest and dream. For Curran, these connections hold significance as the quilt’s function may support a utopian intention, one that projects new possibilities for transformation through deep rest and slowing down, one that pushes back against the screen’s subdual of sunlight and its colonisation of the spaces of daydream. In the process they seek a space of time that allows for different ways of being beyond the relentless demands of the information economy and the endless distractions of the screen.
Photos: Pan Shaofan
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SPACE OF TIME GALLERY, BEIJING
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