I am a wonder whose origin is not known.
I have been in Asia with Noah in the ark..'
Artists T1+2 will be presenting:
ALEX HAMILTON

Wave drawing
We do not trust space. Changing something on paper we must visualize
space. Spatial qualities are only as we find them and not as we wish
them to be while they are under construction. My work is effortless
to absorb and the 'message' simple and surprising. Some ideas are
out of date, useless, decayed, even toxic, and there is a lots of
data or information which is similarly so. "Data exists in physical
formats, data waste is sometimes a factor of the deterioration of
its material base (such as paper or film), and sometimes caused by
a change in technology. attacks on data are often made through its
material.
MARTIN SEXTON
'Magical Lock-down Dark Pegasus'
'(a) Motor-bike with a touch of blood in it is better than all the
riding animals on earth, because of its logical extension of our faculties,
and the hint, the provocations, to excess.' - T.E. Lawrence The Road
In an effort to fuse science's invasion of the imaginative territory
with art's inherent, pseudo-mystical value - this 'sculptural poem'
a Harley-Davidson XL53 Custom resplendent with Crow's wings and 'pimped'
with a DVD monitor as tail-plate; explores the poetical & mythical
devices of the
origins and subsequent tales of Pegasus. This work is concerned also
with freedom and consequently like Pegasus itself, it is equipped
for transportation - a working and moving sculptural poem.
Martin Sexton - a genuinely controversial artist whose work continues
to divide opinion - describes himself principally as a writer first
- this 'sculptural poem' forms part of his on-going 'Physical Literature'
series. He has had one previous publication 'We Love You' as well
as numerous poems and short stories published. His work has most recently
been exhibited at the Port Eliot Literary festival in Cornwall,'Go
Between' in Bregenz, Austria as well as Saatchi & Saatchi, the
ICA and the Venice Biennale & most recently at 'Protect the Human'
- an Amnesty benefit in London. He is a founding participant in The
Salon at Blacks, hosted by Sacha Craddock & James Putnam. He lives
and works in London.
ALEX DE CADENET

Hitler's Skull, Alex de Cadenet
Not only a metaphor for 'who people are inside', the
skull portraits offer a sacred glimpse of the subject's mortality,
the inevitablity of their eventual Destiny.The artist describes the
works as 'a forensic record of the subjects existance'.
I believe that we are all 'artists'; how we live our lives
is the ultimate and most significant 'artwork'. Making 'art' in a
tangible form is just one, albeit sacred, activity in this life. My
art is a record of my deepest thoughts and feelings about being alive....
Whatever causes us to question or re-evaluate our lives has a very
useful value. Anything that attempts to explore the mysteries in life,
in particular the exploration of how our destines evolve is of particular
interest to me. One should ultimately strive to do whatever it is
that one really wants to do in life (and death), that is the ultimate
goal..."
POLLY MORGAN
White Rat in Champagne Glass, Polly
Morgan
I am new to making art. I became a taxidermist through
my love of animals and a desire to preserve their natural beauty and
have gravitated towards making still lives with the animal as subject.
My intention has never been to mimic the natural habitats of animals,
as they are traditionally displayed, but to place them in less expected
scenery. The scale and settings are often unnatural, but the animals
are never anthropomorphised; they remain recognisably themselves in
surprising surroundings. The white rat sits snugly in the champagne
bowl; it almost looks like a scoop of furry ice cream. I enjoy the
fact that that two such opposites should fit together so well. More
of my work may be seen in a permanent installation at Bistrotheque
in east London, for whom I have produced a number of phantasmagorical
bell jars. I am currently working towards a show in spring 2006.
WOLFE LENKIEWICZ

Tryptych, Wolfe
Lenkiewicz, oil on canvas 3 x 244cmx244cm 2005
Emblematic Psychosis
I have entered into a contract with painting, which is not to critique
it, but rather to use it as an illustrative guide, which presents
absolute rebellion of its pictured elements. Painting rather than
collage is preferable in this instance as it allows for the transformative
as well as the juxtaposed, both of which I consider allies set against
any prevailing law. I have chosen a set of emblematic images, each
of which has a shared family resemblance. I then take this established
absolute set, which I see as inaugural, and create within it a revolt.
(A principle followed by the mathematician Georg Cantor.) The turning
upon itself of the emblems causes the revolt.This cannibalism devours
their logical familial law, as Ugolino did to his sons.The result
of this 'family suicide' is an open space to contemplate both the
original meaning and its resulting disobedient hybrid self. From this
space of contemplation is founded the new folly. It is self-f! ounded,
abiding outside the rules of its class, tempting others to read it
logically and let new foundations close around it like water. The
introduction of consciousness to the emblems irritates and provokes
the former codices of their order, revealing a struggle or tension
between the meanings.The inexplicable and illogical nature of this
meaning is ungraspable not because of its being new, but because it
has retired from its normal use and, as if in a folly, taken up a
different part in its script. This disobedient script, which invokes
emblematic psychosis, breaks from the prevailing routine like a soldier
marching out of time. The emblems become nonconformist to the law
and "break from the figure of knowledge which becomes the figure
of slavery...a law of death." (Alain Badiou).
PAUL FRYER

Paul Fryer
I like the natural world, of which we are products.
We are natural, and so is what we make. I love mankind and I love
nature."
Paul Fryer Lives and works in London. He has contributed to various
group shows since 1996 and has just had a very successful solo show,
Carpe Noctum, in April of this year. The object presented here shows
work in progress on a series inspired by the perfection of the egg,
and the beauty of nests. Paul is currently working on a number of
pieces, including a speaking atom bomb and a gigantic lightning machine,
for shows pending in Dallas and London.
LIANE LANG

Liane Lang Prayer 15 x18 inches digital print
Composure
The work orchestrates a slippage between the real and the fake, between
a familiar scene and a re-reading as still life. Deprived of self-consciousness,
they are void, uninhabited positions, providing a space to pause,
like their protagonists, in mock reflection. In this indeterminate
state, meaning is lost and once reestablished can never regain its
definitive nature. "The image is first cut from the visible.
Movement is held up, suspended, inverted, arrested. Cutting is more
essential than presence, both by framing and by the controlled purge
of the visible." 1 Skirting affectionately a line of waiting
issues concerned with the role of photography in the provision and
disreputation of visible proof, what remains is a more specific question
about the cutting edge of the frame. What sets out to be probing the
less controversial but finer detail of the circumstance when an image
was constructed, becomes a tug of war between the formal and the narrative,
the c! lassical versus the romantic, between particulate matter and
the wavefunction of the poetic imagination.
DON'T COLLAPSE. DO COLLAPSE.
