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Private View 10th September Over the past few years Caroline Rothwell has been exploring an imaginary jungle
of hybrids and uncanny life-forms. In her studio, she creates new examples of flora
and fauna made from vinyl, nickel, bronze, nylon and molten metals. Ranging from
the miniature to the monumental, Rothwell's sculptures, drawings and inflatable
installations are new pioneers in the evolutionary chain. In her world, the tropical
meets the temperate, the extinct collides with the futuristic, the hunted becomes the
heroic, and the ordinary is seen as comic.
"My improbable creatures say more about human psychology than animal biology.
My source materials range wide, across such ideas as the representations of
‘otherness’ as portrayed in Victorian natural history museums, mass-produced plastic
toys, books on weeds, and the unintended consequences when European voyagers
arrived in new lands."
These ideas result in mutant, poetic forms, creating a kind of ‘nature jamming’ that
belies categorization. Her sculpture Puff and Hind (2009), for example, shows a
white deer, its antlers twisted into a shape linked with a DNA strand. Clinging to its
hind legs is an enlarged, black amoebic form, upsetting the equilibrium of one of
Mother Nature's proud beasts. Meanwhile, Steed (2009) is a prancing black stallion.
The back of its neck has been sliced, and droplets of blood form a stylized lasso
emerging from its mane.
Slamina (animals backwards) at Maddox Arts also incorporates the human animal
into the mix. Some of Rothwell's skeletal figures are influenced by early European
anatomical drawings comparing man to animals. Made from nickel-plated Britannia
metal (which shines an almost impossibly bright silver), they are macabre yet comical
beings, depicting a horse skeleton, a poppy flower or a massive mouth grafted on to
the body of a man.
Material and process are inherent to Rothwell’s practice. Rothwell's sculptures can
simultaneously appear to be as light as a feather or as heavy as steel. Her unique
production method, whereby molten metal is poured into a cast of stitched fabric,
creates an "over-stuffed" voluminous object with skin-like folds. Nickel-plating and
powder-coating lend an industrial surface.
"Material and process are inherent to Rothwell’s practice," writes Rome-based art critic Jonathan Turner in the exhibition catalogue. "Rothwell's sculptures can
simultaneously appear to be as light as a feather or as heavy as steel. Her unique
production method, whereby molten metal is poured into a cast of stitched fabric,
creates an 'over-stuffed', voluminous object with skin-like creases. Nickel-plating and
powder-coating lend an industrial sheen."
The sinewy forms of plants are rendered in black PVC in Rothwell's Lexicon series,
which are suspended from the ceiling and draped onto the floor. Rothwell turns this
slick, industrial and synthetic material into hand-cut 'landscape drawings', in which
silhouettes emerge from a lacework of cuts. Fragile and fetishist, the sliced PVC
exposes the irregularities caused by trial and error. Scalpel nicks and wavering lines
disclose the imperfections of human manufacture.
This exhibition at Maddox Arts in London is concurrent with Rothwell's show
Dispersed at The Economist Plaza in St James, commissioned by the Contemporary
Art Society1. This features three bronze sculptures of the extinct Tasmanian Tiger
based on colonial drawings, museum displays and scientific studies, re-imagined by
Rothwell as a cross between a comical soft toy and a nightmarish beast. It is a
continuation of her fascination with the concept of the "recreation" of extinct species
through genetic manipulation and advances in DNA technology. In the lobby of The
Economist, a series of Rothwell's PVC cut-outs, based on a hybrid group of natural
life-forms, climb up the windows to suggest a world enveloped by strange, subtropical
office plants.
Born in Hull in 1967, Caroline Rothwell studied in London at the Wimbledon School
of Art and the Camberwell College of Art before moving to New Zealand, and then
Sydney, where she now predominantly lives. Recent exhibitions include solo shows
at GrantPirrie Gallery and Artspace in Sydney; Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne; Sue
Crockland Gallery, Auckland; and a large-scale inflatable installation for the 2009
Hong Kong Art Fair. In 2004 she was artist-in-residence at Nottingham University for
which she produced a traveling solo show, and in 2007 she completed a wall drawing
for Norman Foster's Deutschebank building in Sydney. Slamina is her first solo show
in London for a decade.
For further details and images contact Edward Cutler on
020 7495 3101 or 07775 763 977
info@maddoxarts.com
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