Showing posts with label James Aldridge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Aldridge. Show all posts

Monday, 12 July 2010

Galerie Gabriel Rolt | Unnaturel Order | James Aldridge

Hi everyone! Do you remember about James Aldridge? I talked about him in one of my posts and few days ago Wanda Riedijk, press responsible at Gabriel Rolt Gallery in Amsterdam, send me the press release for an exhibiton of this artist! So, for who will be in Amsterdam in September, enjoy it!:-)

Ciao a tutti! Vi ricordate di James Aldridge? Ho parlato di lui in uno dei miei post e qualche giorno fa Wanda Riedijk, responsabile stampa alla galleria Gabriel Rolt, ad Amsterdam, mi ha mandato il comunicato stampa di una mostra di questo artista! Per chi sarà ad Amsterdam a settembre e volesse passare ecco qui le informazioni! :-)

GALERIE GABRIEL ROLT presents

UNNATURAL ORDER

JAMES ALDRIDGE

04 SEPTEMBER – 16 0CTOBER 2010

Opening reception: Saturday 04 September 17.00 – 19.30 hrs.


James Aldridge, BLACK SUN, 2010 - Acrylic on canvas, 250 x 200 cm

James Aldridge, THE GATHERING, 2010 - Acrylic on Canvas, 175 x 150 cm

GALERIE GABRIEL ROLT is proud to present UNNATURAL ORDER an exhibition of recent paintings, watercolors and three dimensional works by British artist James Aldridge. This will be Aldridge’s second solo exhibition in The Netherlands.
James Aldridge takes on themes of nature, landscape and mortality in works that are simultaneously beautiful and disturbing, fascinating and repulsive. Aldridge’s work is inspired by his immediate environment, the forests of Småland in Southern Sweden and the music he listens to - extreme Heavy Metal.
For his second solo exhibition at Galerie Gabriel Rolt, he will present paintings, watercolors and a new series of his modified bird boxes. In the selection and hanging of the works, the show sees Aldridge taking a more installational approach to create an atmosphere that is strange and darkly humorous, immersing the viewer within his landscapes and objects.
Birds feature throughout Aldridge's practice. His fascination with them began as a child, making drawings from his father's collection of bird-watching books, and they have since become carriers for many of the themes addressed in his work. The likes of crows, owls, magpies recur throughout the paintings and cutouts, each bringing its own associations and symbolic qualities as well as a rich aesthetic beauty. The birds exist in landscapes of thorns, branches, coils of smoke and other animals, like stags. The human presence comes as skulls and bones - never as living beings. It is loaded and intense imagery, its excessiveness working as a means of reclaiming the cliché; of reinvesting these potent symbols with their true meaning. Hence, the grotesqueness and horror that appears in these images offers a sense of nature's reality: that it is a cycle of life and death; one that can be cruel. The new paintings see Aldridge taking his compositions into more dense and delirious realms. There is at once an epic scale in the drama, movement and detail as well as claustrophobia within the picture plane. Despite the violent and dark ingredients, the paintings are unquestionably beautiful - there is a visual fascination in their sense of movement, the layering of forms and unpredictability of each composition.
The bird boxes are found objects, which have been altered by Aldridge. Named 'Holk', after the Swedish word for nesting box, they represent another form of humans attempting to impose their own standards on nature; in this case, the idea of birds living in houses. One box is the shape of a church and Aldridge has inverted the cross, which hangs over its door. Another has been charred with fire and had fat long nails hammered out of each wall. Metal music and its surrounding culture inform much of Aldridge's practice and here there is a connection to the Black metal subculture whose anti-everything attitude is manifested in homemade wristbands impaled with nails. Metal music is often considered dumb, clichéd, over-the-top, though its sincerity, directness and creative ambition - not to mention, its wealth of extreme imagery - make for a direct influence on Aldridge's work.

James Aldridge (Farnborough UK, 1971) lives and works in Sweden. He has had recent solo exhibitions in Madrid, Wellington and London and his commissioned painting 'Cold Mouth Prayer' has been on display at Tate Modern since 2007. James Aldridge studied at the Royal College of Art in London and Manchester Metropolitan University.

GALERIE GABRIEL ROLT

Elandsgracht 34, 1016 TW Amsterdam. Tel: +31 (0)20 78 55 146. gallery@gabrielrolt.com / http://www.gabrielrolt.com/ . Gallery hours: Wednesday to Saturday 12.00 - 18.00 hrs.


James Aldridge, PRODIGIOSUS ORDO, 2010 - Watercolor on paper, 65 x 50 cm

Thursday, 22 April 2010

James Aldridge - Flowers, plants and heavy metal










James Aldridge was born in 1971, in UK, but today he lives and works in Sweden. His artistic works are a mix of naturals book and heavy-metal cd cover! Plants, flowers, colorful images are combined with skulls and ravens. Such dichotomy, as life and death, catch my attention and rise my curiosity to learn more about this artist! Wasn’t easy at all!  No web-site, no blog articles, just press. This is the best, with all the articles together (http://www.poppysebire.com/artists/James_Aldridge_press.htm ).
Since 2005 James Aldridge has been working in isolation in a Swedish forest listening to heavy metal. Having been a fan in his early teens, Aldridge recently rediscovered this music as a kind of nostalgia. Aldridge takes inspiration from the serious, heartfelt nature of the music and the rather contradictory, often clichéd nature of some of the imagery and subject matter.
The choice to make work in a relative wilderness has allowed him to become immersed in his subject matter and as a result there has been a shift in his relationship to it. Early works show an idealised and harmonious engagement with the beauty of the natural world. However, this has now given way to a more sinister macabre portrayal, suggestive of a more complex relationship with his environment, altering and confusing the exchanges between the characters and wildlife within the works themselves.

James Aldridge è nato nel 1971 in Gran Bretagna, ma oggi vive e lavora in Svezia. I suoi lavori sono un mix di libri sulla natura e copertine di cd heavy metal! Piante, fiori e immagini colorate sono accostate a teschi e corvi. Questa dicotomia, come vita e morte, ha catturato la mia attenzione e stuzzicato la curiosità di sapere di più di questo artista! Ma non è stato per nulla facile! Non ci sono web site o blog che parlino di lui, solo alcuni articoli di giornale. Questo indirizzo è a mio parere il migliore con tutti gli articoli messi insieme (http://www.poppysebire.com/artists/James_Aldridge_press.htm ).
Dal 2005 James Aldridge ha lavorato isolato nella foresta Svedese ascoltando heavy metal, genere musicale riscoperto dall’artista che ne era già fan durante l’adolescenza. Aldridge prende ispirazione dalla seria e sentita natura di questa musica e dal piuttosto contraddittorio e spesso stereotipato immaginario che le fa da sfondo. La scelta di lavorare nella foresta gli ha permesso di essere quasi totalmente immerso nel suo soggetto creativo e il risultato è stata un’evoluzione del suo rapporto con esso. Se I primi lavori, infatti, mostrano un rapporto ideaizzato e armonioso con la bellezza della natura circostante, gli ultimi sono decisamente più macabri e sinistri. I lavori più recenti di Aldridge svelano un rapporto più complesso con l’ambiente, alterando e confondendo gli scambi tra I soggetti, la natura e i lavori stessi.

All the works posted here are from James Aldridge.







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