Tag: Sandra Lane

  • Ceramics by Sandra Lane at Sim Smith Galley

    Ceramics by Sandra Lane at Sim Smith Galley

    What Kind Of Spirit Is This?

    02 May – 01 June 2019

    The inaugural show at the gallery, this exhibition casts a celebratory and inquisitive eye over painting today. Combining original work by eight artists concerned with employing paint to express their own particular narratives, this exhibition centers on the power of painting in the digitally connected 21st Century.

    Curated by one of the artists on Smith’s roster, David Surman, the exhibition asks the question “Why paint? Who needs painting?” in a world that seems to have evolved so far beyond the medium in terms of artistic possibilities.

    The exhibition features artworks from Matija Bobičić (b. 1987, Slovenia), Tim Garwood (b. 1984, UK), Kate Groobey (b. 1979, UK), Aly Helyer (b. 1965, UK), Doppel Kim (b. 1985, Korea), Sandra Lane (b. 1954, UK), Jonathan McCree (b. 1963, UK), Daisy Parris (b. 1993, UK), Maïa Régis (b.1995, France).

    Featuring paintings and painted ceramics, the works pursue an array of ideas from the historical and architectural to human existence and identity. The challenges and interplays of paint are seen through visceral brushstrokes in a preoccupation with surface in some works and with subject in others. Some subjects are crudely drawn and almost childlike whilst others dissolve and disappear under layers of texture. Gestural figuration to total abstraction, the paint transforms, delights and teaches us about this new energy in a snapshot of the quality of the painting landscape today.

  • Sandra Lane – Copeland Gallery

    There are few more days to see this lovely show in Copeland Park in Peckham.

    One of the current studio members Sandra Lane had been working towards it  for the last several month.

    Our team were very pleased to join the opening yesterday, and see pieces we have helped to produce in action. It is always exciting for us to see how artists use ceramics alongside other techniques, and Sandra’s work is a really joyful example of it.

    See more of Sandra’s work on her website:

    http://sandra-lane.com/

    Or follow her on instagram @artysandralane

     

    Image by Sandra Lane.

  • Recommended: If You Can’t Stand the Heat

    If you would like to see some most recent ceramics and clay art, If You Can’t Stand The Heat is the show at Roaming Projects we could recommend. We are pleased to have been supporting artists in the show at production and ceramics firings, and we know the effort end ingenuity that goes into their work. Seeing shows that have so many pieces produced with our help is what makes our work rewarding. That’s where we started off with the studio mission 3,5 years ago – making clay work possible for mixed media and young artists.

    If You Can’t Stand the Heat

    Aisha Christison, Alicia Reyes McNamara, Aliyah Hussain, Amy Leung, Anne Ryan, Annie Attridge, Anousha Payne, Bea Bonafini, Cassie Griffin, Coco Crampton, Emily McCartan, Hannah Bays, Hannah Regel, Jessie Makinson, Katie Schwab, Lindsey Mendick, Ludovica Gioscia, Paloma Proudfoot, Rose Eken, Sally Hackett, Sandra Lane, Urara Tsuchiya, Victoria Adam, Yelena Popova, Zoe Williams

    12 – 28 January 2018

    Private View: Thursday 11th January 2018, 18:00 – 21:00

    11 Bohemia Place, London, E8 1DU
    Open Wed-Sun, 12:00 – 18:00 and by appointment
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    roaming projects is pleased to present If You Can’t Stand The Heat. Organised by Lindsey Mendick, Paloma Proudfoot and Ruth Pilston, the exhibition presents a collection works by 25 artists, brought together through a shared interest in materiality. From consumption to sensuality, daily life to science fiction, the artworks in the gallery manifest a variety of subjects, evoking disparate sentiments, but are united by a common theme: Clay.

    The materiality of the clay creates tactile interest – we want to hold, to fondle, to turn the object over in our hands. With ceramics, the physical engagement of the artist and the pleasure in the material is palpable. It can be seen in the patterns and traces made in the fresh clay, in the incidental marks of the throwing process and in the subtle depressions and thumbprints left on the surface. These marks are visible in terracotta pots dug up from archaeological sites just as they are flaunted in the sculptures of the 21st century artist. Fired clay holds not only the memory of the maker, forged in place by the heat of the kiln, but also becomes an archive of the each successive user. The object in clay, be it a tea cup or a sculpture, becomes a palimpsest; an heirloom simultaneously conferring history whilst offer-ing itself forward to renewed interpretation.

    We all know how it feels to hold a ceramic object; most days, we eat off them, drink from them, piss into them. The recognisable motifs in the artworks here engage our tactile imagination; intimate forms – of cups and cigarettes, shells and reclining nudes – are imbued with both emotional and haptic familiarity. Each sculpture is reminiscent of a tactile experience evoking a sense of touch even without a human presence, like witnessing the sullied plates and empty glasses of last night’s dinner. In their familiarity, the weight, texture and significance of each piece can be comprehended without handling them. We’ve known the utilitarian counterparts of these objects – the bowl, the vase, the broken shard – and, as such, we know the coolness of a ceramic curve, the sharpness of a pointed edge.

    If You Can’t Stand the Heat proposes a space in a liminal position between the familiar and the not-so-familiar. In this sanctuary, the known is subtly altered and subverted, creating an uneasy yet alluring limbo between the mundane and the magical.