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Grammar See, Rod Barton,
London EC1
22nd May - 26th June, 2010
Private View: Thursday 20th May, 6 - 9pm
Group show including:
Steve Bishop, Mauro Bonacina, Oliver Rafferty and Ed
Saye curated by Jessica Watts.
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The word grammar derives from the Greek grammatik techn meaning ‘art
of letters’, and from gramma ‘letter’, itself
from graphein ‘to draw, to write’.
Grammar See includes four artists who construct their own rules
of language across painting and sculpture. Varying in form
each artist approaches these traditions and the cross pollination
between them differently and independently. Referencing Gramercy
Park in the title is such that the park layout represents one
of the earliest attempts in the United States at ‘City
Planning’. The secluded Manhattan park is only one of two
private parks in New York City where the closest local residence
are allowed access by key for an annual fee. Association is two
fold; art school systems similarly script the broad subjects
of painting and sculpture into carefully selected yearly structures.
A grammar where certain information is not acquired by conscious
study or instruction, but by observing other ‘speakers’.
Every speaker of a language has in their head a set of rules
for using that language. Grammar acts as the set of structural
rules that govern the composition of form in any given natural
language and refers to the study of such rules. The selected
artists unlock the boundaries of these two mediums and challenge
our perceptions of their traditional structure. Thereby learning
their language and demonstrating it at the same time through
a confidence in experimentation. Each of their visual systems
have their own distinguishing alphabets rich in investigation.
In light of this perhaps we can reconsider our own learnt dialogue
in approaching these traditions.
Steve Bishop works with carefully selected found objects. Structure
and balance together with a concern for contradiction are some
of the aspects that characterize his practice. Through a process
of rehabilitation and re–appropriation an elegance of form
is rewritten. Bishop installs a visual purpose for these works,
from obsolete consumer good to a re-energised structure within
the gallery context.
Mauro Bonacina’s monumental painting demonstrates his confident
and performative expression where the canvas merely acts as the
surface for his ‘one liner’s’. A fiercely experimental
practice rooted in constant questioning his work spans a variety
of media comprising paint, sculptural installation, performance
and film. Bonacina does not buy into universalism but rather
establishes complex references to various discourses both intrinsic
and foreign to the notion of art.
Oliver Rafferty breaks down the methodology with which to make
a work. Appropriating an object, altering its characteristics
and transferring it to a world apart from its original intent,
away from normal archive of references. The temporality of
each of the works is heightened by their placement, no longer
of consumption
or appropriation but of both a languid and defined statement.
Rafferty consistently stretches avenues of exploration through
altering the standard use of and for the manmade material.
Ed Saye forces paint to break down into pure abstraction, it
being reduced drastically to a purist form of making. Not unlike
the white noise of a television set the repetitive nature of
the patterns he creates lulls one into a false sense of trust
in constant form, until on closer inspection the structure
dissolves logical preconceptions and the inconsistencies allow
a new relationship
to develop. Through a bare palette Saye exposes the trust placed
in his painting tools and welcomes ‘error’.

STEVE BISHOP
My Work Here is Done XIII, 2010
Glass
82 x 50 cm
(left)
MAURO BONACINA
LONDON.ENGLAND.17_03_2009.14-38pm, 2009
Enamel and oil on aluminum
230 x 180 x 3 cm
(right)

OLIVER RAFFERTY
Untitled, 2009
Oil on board
37 x 40 cm
(left)
OLIVER RAFFERTY
Untitled, 2010
Wood, lighting gel
337 x 19 x 20 cm
(right)
ED SAYE
Untitled, 2010
Acrylic on linen
129.5 x 94 cm
(left)
STEVE BISHOP
16:9, 2009
Copper-etched glass, lighting gel
99 x 58 cm
(right)
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