Open: Wed-Sat 11am-6pm

4-8 Helmet Row, EC1V 3QJ, London, United Kingdom
Open: Wed-Sat 11am-6pm


Visit    

The Moth and The Thunderclap

Modern Art Helmet Row, London

Sat 4 Feb 2023 to Sat 18 Mar 2023

4-8 Helmet Row, EC1V 3QJ The Moth and The Thunderclap

Wed-Sat 11am-6pm

Modern Art presents a group exhibition featuring over 40 artists. Taking its title from a painting by the celebrated American artist Charles Burchfield, The Moth and The Thunderclap aims to show how artists have been compelled to reflect an indeterminate psychological space where nature and culture collide, often filtered through their experience of landscape.

Artworks

David Byrd

Oil on canvas

686 × 535 mm

James Owens

Oil on canvas

1400 × 1600 × 20 mm

Lisa Sanditz

Oil on canvas

400 × 500 × 40 mm

Uwe Henneken

Oil on canvas

400 × 500 mm

Andrew Cranston

Distemper and oil on canvas

787 × 940 mm

Ever Baldwin

Oil on canvas in charred wood frame

755 × 1000 mm

Trevor Shimizu

Oil on canvas

1320 × 1250 × 33 mm

Martyn Cross

Oil on canvas

305 × 203 × 20 mm

Martyn Cross

Oil on canvas

356 × 406 mm

N.H. Stubbing

Oil on canvas

610 × 510 mm

Forrest Bess

Oil on canvas board

295 × 270 mm

Aubrey Williams

Oil on canvas

1861 × 1277 mm

Oscar Tuazon

Watercolour on paper

310 × 310 mm

Haroun Hayward

Watercolour on paper

640 × 835 mm

Haroun Hayward

Watercolour on paper

640 × 835 mm

Ken Kiff

Acrylic on paper

645 × 805 mm

Lois Dodd

Oil on Masonite

433 × 610 mm

Alyina Zaidi

arcylic on wood

24 × 400 mm

Nasim Hantehzadeh

Oil and oil stick on linen

610 × 406 mm

Laurie Nye

Oil on linen

1475 × 1723 mm

Jane Hayes Greenwood

Oil on linen

900 × 1100 mm

Sanya Kantarovsky

Oil on linen

600 × 800 × 25 mm

Mark Laver

Oil on wood panel

1219 × 1219 × 40 mm

Justin Caguiat

Oil and gouache on linen

3283 × 2483 mm

Yimiao Liu

Graphite and coloured pencil on paper

810 × 610 mm

Sky Glabush

1830 × 2440 × 40 mm

Kinke Kooi

Acrylic, colour pencil, gouache on paper

640 × 830 mm

Bill Lynch

Oil on wood

567 × 575 × 15 mm

Marion Adnams

Oil on panel

560 × 660 mm

Ithell Colquhoun

Oil on board

460 × 1585 × 35 mm

Charles Burchfield

Watercolour, charcoal, and white chalk on joined paper mounted on board

1320 × 1160 mm

Frank Walter

Oil on biocomposite material with Masonite backing

235 mm

Co Westerik

Tempera alkyd oil paint on canvas

870 × 665 mm

Vija Celmins

Mezzotint on Hahnemühle Copperplate Bright White paper in artist’s frame

514 × 578 mm

Abel Auer

Oil and acrylic on canvas

1200 × 1505 × 30 mm

Cecil Collins

Oil on board

1405 × 1080 mm

Ngoia Pollard Napaltjarri

Synthetic polymer paint on Belgian linen

560 × 610 × 20 mm

Heinrich Nüsslein

Oil on board

535 × 407 mm

Charles Burchfield

Watercolor, charcoal, and chalk on paper

947 × 1170 × 50 mm

Solange Knopf

Colored pencil and graphite on fiber paper

1165 × 862 mm

Vidya Gastaldon

Oil on vintage paint

577 × 662 mm

Edward Burra

Pencil, watercolour and gouache on paper

1490 × 922 mm

Sanaa Gateja

Paper, acrylic stitched on bark cloth

1560 × 1240 mm

Nyarapayi Giles

Acrylic on canvas

1220 × 754 mm

Amadeo Lorenzato

Oil on hardboard

420 × 475 mm

Installation Views

The work can be variously described as spectral. dreamscapes, cosmological fantasies, celebrations of personal mythologies, surreal responses to a heightened sense of reality or simply personal responses to a direct experience of the natural world. Images move between abstraction, the biomorphic and the figurative, floating between inner and outer worlds, mixing both familiar and elusive imagery, sometimes guided by powers beyond their own, to construct narratives that can range from lyrical poeticism to surreal encounters, from the darkly comic to the reverential and transcendental.

For many, a sense of place resonates. It takes an hour of walking through working farms and unsigned footpaths to reach Zawn Pyg, a tall, thin stone arch situated on the quiet beach of Nanjizal on one of the most westerly points of Cornwall. During winter months when the sun sets, the light aligns with the arch, casting golden arcs through the narrow passageway and the thrashing surf. Ithell Colquhoun (1906−1988) paid homage to Zawn Pyg, known as The Song of the Sea, in her 1962 painting Stalactite. Even if she may have never visited (and possibly based the work from a postcard), the site resonated with Colquhoun’s strong esoteric beliefs of Mother Earth as a living, pulsating force, a centre of essential power amid the interconnectedness of the universe.

Over 10,000 miles across the globe, in the central desert region of Australia’s Northern Territories, one imagines Ngoia Pollard Napaltjarri would have instinctively understood Colquhoun’s sense of cosmic consciousness and connection to the land. Napaltjarri (1948−2022), a Walpiri-speaking indigenous woman, painted her ​‘dreamings’, or stories, that related to her father’s sacred country around Yamunturrngu (Mount Liebig) and near to where she lived. The oval shapes in her paintings, representative of the lakes that appeared after rain, were charged with the spiritual presence of the water snake that lies beneath the surface.

In these, and the work of many artists that feature in The Moth and the Thunderclap, this connection to the earth is never far away, often drawn from ancient, folkloric, animistic and mystical traditions. In his painting Nebulic Cluster (Cosmos) 1985, the Guyanese artist Aubrey Williams (1926−1990) we find his reclamation of long buried myths and traditions of Amerindian cultures fused with a personal fascination with celestial bodies, inspired by the many nights he gazed through his telescope. In Cecil Collins’s Waters of the Sun (1962), a vast fiery globe tears through an empty, landscape. In Martyn Cross’s The Way of No Way (2022) giant and mysterious figures have become entangled with the ground, as if enveloping them, while in Vidya Gastaldon’s Marine Monster (2016) — which the artist calls one of her ​“healing paintings” — a large anthropomorphic shape jostles for space amid a mass of indeterminate organic forms.

Curated by Simon Grant, The Moth and The Thunderclap features an eclectic global mix of artists from modernism to the present day, including, Marion Adnams, Abel Auer, Ever Baldwin, Forrest Bess, Charles Burchfield, Edward Burra, David Byrd, Justin Caguiat, Vija Celmins, Cecil Collins, Ithell Colquhoun, Andrew Cranston, Martyn Cross, Lois Dodd, Lera Dubitskaya, Vidya Gastaldon, Sanaa Gateja, Victor Gatto, Nyarapayi Giles, Sky Glabush, Jane Hayes Greenwood, Nasim Hantehzadeh, Haroun Hayward, Uwe Henneken, Sanya Kantarovsky, Ken Kiff, Solange Knopf, Kinke Kooi, Mark Laver, Yimiao Liu, Amadeo Lorenzato, Bill Lynch, Heinrich Nusslein, Laurie Nye, James Owens, Ngoia Pollard Napaltjarri, Lisa Sanditz, Trevor Shimizu, nh Stubbing, Oscar Tuazon, Frank Walter, Co Westerik, Aubrey Williams and Alyina Zaidi.

The Moth and The Thunderclap, Modern Art Helmet Row, exhibition view, 4 February - 18 March 2023. Photo: Michael Brzezinski. Courtesy: Modern Art, London.

By using GalleriesNow.net you agree to our use of cookies to enhance your experience. Close