VITALIC at Hales Gallery East London 12 April – 1 June 2013

Hales Gallery announces VITALIC, a show of four artists who explore the relationship between a personal fictional narrative and the artist’s own (very different) backgrounds and realities.

What draws these artists together is the imagery present in much of the work on show, which suggests a fantastical private world occupied only by the artist and a complex thought process.

Sebastiaan Bremer, Schoener Goetterfunken XII, ‘Where Thy Gentle Wing

Sebastiaan Bremer, Schoener Goetterfunken XII, ‘Where Thy Gentle Wing

These fantasies are, however, all grounded in a tangible, physical experience of the world.

The four artists:

SEBASTIAAN BREMER

Sebastiaan Bremer dapples tiny freckles of paint over the surface of glossy photographs. The resulting works attempt to subvert, or at least redefine the photograph as a historical document in time. Bremer’s fascination with the expression of the ‘Romantic’ in art has led him to explore both images of himself, his father and his children as well as isolated eyes taken from the photographs of Bill Brandt. More recently images of the musician Harry Nilsson have become the focus in his attempt to discover the man behind the image. The dream‐like atmosphere that Bremer has created by re‐touching, allows the viewers to enter them and establish an intimate connection with the works.

OMAR BA

Omar Ba makes paintings directly onto corrugated cardboard sheets, the artists preferred surface. His relocation from Dakar to Geneva has had a major effect on his work bringing together African and Western influences often centred around single figures, isolated on blackened surfaces. The highly patterned and elaborate personages draw together imagery associated with famine, tribal decoration, factional warfare and despotic self‐styled leaders along with advances in new technology and popular culture.

HEW LOCKE

Hew Locke explores the languages of post‐colonial power. His interests have led him to a wide range of subject matter including the representation of royal portraiture, coats‐of‐arms, public statuary, trophies, company share certificates, weaponry and costume. Locke’s ability to fuse this existing material with his own political and cultural concerns makes for some witty amalgamation between the modern materials he sources and uses in his sculpture and the historic subject matter. Successfully merging influences from his native Guyana and the readily available British colonial subject matter from around him in London where Locke now lives and works, Locke probes the contemporary ramifications of these histories but does it with a lightness of touch allowing the viewer to enjoy the luscious colour and rich textures.

TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK

Trenton Doyle Hancock’s works are suffused with personal mythology. Through collage, paint, and accumulations of detritus, he creates energetic and subversive narratives. Hancock employs a variety of cultural tropes, ranging in tone from comic‐strip superhero battles to medieval morality plays, often using language, which is contained within the works, both as way to drive the narrative and as a central visual component. His renowned and on‐going body of work is the visually depicted tale of his sprawling, epic battle between the forces of good, as represented by ‘Mounds’ and their colour‐filled world, and evil, as embodied by the skeletal ‘Vegans’ who live underground in a world of black and white

Exhibition runs: 12 April – 1 June 2013

Where: Hales Gallery, Tea Building, 7 Bethnal Green Road, London E1 6LA
Phone No: +44 (0) 020 7033 1938

www.halesgallery.com

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