Curated by Simon Rumley
Private View
| Sponsored by Jeremiah Weed Brews
Wednesday April 4th
6.30-8.30pm
Exhibition
Dates
Thursday April 5th
– Saturday May 12th 2012
Gallery Hours
Wednesday–Saturday 11am–6pm or by appointment
CHARLIE SMITH london is pleased to present Welsh
born Wendy Mayer with her first London one person show, curated by
international curator and film maker Simon Rumley. Rumley first saw Mayer’s
work in 2010 and promptly acquired several pieces. Subsequently he curated her
into The Future Can Wait, the museum
scale show for emerging artists that he co-curates with gallery director Zavier
Ellis, where Mayer was placed for the first time into the Saatchi Gallery
collection amongst others. As Rumley describes:
I first
saw Wendy's work in a show in Vyner Street back in early 2010. It consisted of
three life-sized papier mache children with piercing eyes and beguiling grins
looking like a David Bowie bastard offspring from The Man Who Fell To Earth on
a quick detour trip to Midwich. I wasn't sure whether I was supposed to be charmed
or freaked out but I bought the piece immediately and it's remained a central
piece in my living room ever since. I curated Wendy into that year's The Future
Can Wait show and the mass reaction was exactly the same; people weren't sure
whether to like these little snappers or be repelled by them. Irrespective of
this conundrum the great thing was that people couldn't stop looking at them
and I think that's the genius of Wendy's work. Part Ron Mueck, part Hans Bellmer they
remind us not only of ourselves but of the vicissitudes of life; some of them
are crying hysterically, some look blissfully happy with pins stuck into their
skin, some are wrapped in Beano comic strips and others have little creatures
attacking them. It's a crazy world, a scary world, a disturbing world even, but
a world which looks mischievous and eminently enjoyable; a world which, on
reflection, you know you're not alone in wanting to be a part of.
Indeed, Mayer’s sculptural figures represent
a disturbing vision of the human form which beyond that draws on familial
relations and myths, and the artist’s response to them. Having always been
fascinated by dolls and children’s toys, Mayer constantly returns to them in
order to render herself and those around her in strange doll-like, waxwork
form. As such, we are presented with autobiographical sculptures that are powerfully
representational but also eerily unreal. Caught in stasis all are engaging in
some activity, mostly in play. However, these figures appear to be aware of the
audience. In between reality and fiction, and during action, they check in
order to challenge our gaze, casting us as voyeurs who have disturbed their
private moments. These moments are drawn directly from Mayer’s experience as a
child herself and now as a mother. In her own words:
The dolls in ‘Duck / Rabbit’
are menacingly saccharine. They appear to be protesting their innocence whilst
playing with dead baby animals. The work plays with our perception of children
as innocents. [‘Gold
Watch’, Saatchi Gallery Collection] is a portrait that references emotional damage and repair suffered at
the hands of our children.
And so on, as individual pieces reference in turn a family member fallen
from grace; a folk song sung by the artist’s Grandfather; the privilege of
being a mother who must eventually let her offspring go; sibling rivalry; the
fear of ageing. Thus, Mayer provides us with deeply personal works that also
tend to provoke universal feelings related to simply being a child, a sibling
or a mother.
Please contact gallery for images and further
information
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