The Hog’s Back

Blackbird Rook presents

 

The Hog’s Back

Donal Moloney   Ross Taylor   Sarah Kate Wilson

 

19th September - 12th October

Thursday – Saturday 12 - 6pm

69 York Street, London W1H 1QD

Donal Maloney, Filament, filament, filament, 2024

 

What is it that makes the hairs on the back of our necks stand up?

The artists here share an interest in imaging. Sifting, gouging and misting produce hallucinations and daydreams, echoes, sleep states, visions and spells - a limitless succession of universes.

The surfaces are charged with action - elements emerge to be felt, rather than grasped, by the viewer. The tussle between colours, forms, gestures and materials, makes our tongues itch and seeds goosebumps. We repress a shudder, the imagery sticking to our eyelids like afterburn.

Taylor explains his work “…is concerned with an emergent space; a swilling and churning dual sphere of production and consumption where all that enters is incessantly gnawed, singed and regurgitated”. Wilson’s work is crystallised around subjects; animal mimicry, ancestral knowledge and magical practices, which she expresses by weaving together images, symbols and events found in the natural world - Fibonacci spirals, animal camouflage and atmospheric phenomena. The titles of Moloney’s paintings ‘Shipwreck’, ‘Sailing to the middle’ and ‘Levitating’, coupled with images of hieroglyphics, castles, and children, allude to journeys, confusion, memories and daydreams anchored in the real world.

 

Ross, Taylor, Too much interested to speak, 2023

 

In searching for the ineffable, each artist puts painting through its paces. Moloney, working with acrylic and watercolour on canvas, traps images under painterly washes - misty rainbow-coloured veils that momentarily occlude what lies beneath. Taylor loads oil paint on panel which is then scraped and rubbed away. Erasure eventually gives way to overpainting and repair over years. Wilson’s inky, waxy, textured paintings employ sgraffito, frottage, mono-printing and collage. Sometimes panels are replaced with holographic substrates - applying paint, inks and wax to these colour-shifting surfaces means they never settle - always remaining in flux.

These are paintings with echo - we see it, then see it differently, our memory disorts the material world in front of us, and ushers in a space of hallucination - paintings as spells, that cast a lure to draw in the viewer.

 

Sarah Kate Wilson, Chaos Terrain, 2023


19th September - 12th October

Thursday – Saturday 12 - 6pm

69 York Street, London W1H 1QD


 

www.blackbirdrook.com blackbirdrook@gmail.com +44 7775 945181