CORINNE
FELGATE
DMITRI GALITZINE
LAURA YUILE
SIMON REUBEN WHITE
7 – 23 August 2009
Closing Event: Sunday 23rd August. Open discussion lead by artist and
writer Josie Faure Walker
NETTIE HORN is pleased to
present “By-Product” a group exhibition curated by Fozia
Khaliq which investigates the working processes of the artists Corinne
Felgate, Dmitri Galitzine, Laura Yuile and Simon Reuben White. The
exhibition explores the history of the objects and sounds usually used
by these artists in the search of some incidental happening or development
that can be understood in some shape or form as a by-product.
The exhibiting artists were asked to bring to light the elements which
they would normally discard or leave behind in their working processes.
Having reconsidered this notion of “by-product” within the
context of their body of work, each artist has translated it into newly
developed and re-developed works and therefore reconsidering their own
working practices and methods. Focusing on this idea of “by-product”
is a way of challenging our views on the value of art and what exactly
is loaded into an object or sound that gives its status to an art object. |

Dmitri Galitzine, DayTrip to Clacton,
2009 |
Corinne Felgate
Through arbitrary human interaction, Felgate's sculpture "blinded
by the light" becomes, similarly to previous works, unavoidably
performative. Her crafted installations and re-workings of everyday
objects become explorations of a culturally constructed idea of the
ordinary. Through theatrizing the associated characteristics of familiar
objects, Felgate questions the functional process of a culture based
on collective rituals.
Dmitri Galitzine
“My work utilizes specific (and
often bizarre) subcultures to examine the absurdities of modern life.
The Huntsman, the Oilman and the Pigeon Fancier provide the framework
to consider the social anachronisms of Britain today. Cultural traditions
and rituals are examined through juxtaposition: Science Fiction with
B&Q. The work draws upon the stuff of catalogues, the paraphernalia
known only to the hobbyist on a Saturday afternoon in the garage. My
work is both familiar and alien, local and foreign and seeks to be
just as beautiful as it is hideous”
Galitzine uses materials such as tar
which is a chemical by-product of industrial processes and has drawn
together a visual catalogue of overlooked sub-cultural references.
The combination of the two creates a conversation around the incident
of cultural cross-references.
Laura Yuile
Yuile’s work in “By-Product”
will address previously exhibited works, and therefore opening a discussion
about the artist’s ongoing personal battle between action and
thought, concept and form. A self confessed obsessive, Yuile’s
sculptural collages will be replaced by a video installation alongside
a diaristic, self reflective interview-style narration. In addition,
a throne created from discarded materials used in previous sculptures
will seat the viewer as the artist shares her concerns and personal
feelings of failure. The dismantling and reassembling of these art objects
reflects a similar process of fragmentation and reconstruction of the
artist’s thoughts and emotions.
Simon Reuben White
White’s working process involves
continuous archiving of daily happenings with particular emphasis on
his own life and experiences. Using his personal history as a constant source
for the sounds he documents, he then edits and re-composes them into sound pieces.
For By-Product, White has paid particular attention to the sounds which
he previously chose not to include in his works. This ‘waste’,
created from the editing process and being a by-product of the artists
working methods, would usually be devalued and discarded to make room
for a more refined art piece. White will be collecting and re-assembling
his sound by-products into a new sound piece looking back into the
forgotten history within the sound. |