
Fieldgate Gallery
Lee Holden – Tod Hanson - Denise Hawrysio - Alex Schady & Mia Taylor
Margaret O’Brien - Richard Ducker
Zoë Walker & Neil Bromwich - Bruno Martelli & Ruth Gibson (igloo)
As it happens, there is no Dumb Waiter in the building, and one could hardly be imagined, but it remains a useful curatorial metaphor for passing from o...ne environ to another. Each artist is given space to develop a site-specific installation, and in some cases were asked to produce an idiosyncratic response to the space. In Harold Pinter’s play of the same name, which takes place in a basement room, it appears that two hit men, Ben and Gus, are awaiting "orders" regarding their next unknown victim. Simultaneously comic and threatening requests emanate from the unseen operator of the dumbwaiter who appears to be "senior" partner Ben's intended victim at the end of the play. This exercise in semantics and menace corresponds with much of the work in the exhibition.
The word ‘dumb’ in Dumb Waiter implies a stupidity and/or muteness. Yet within this pejorative term of abuse there is a resistance. Muteness has power: it refuses dialogue.
Much of the artwork here exploits this paradox. Language is obfuscated, while sound/noise disguises primal anxieties and architectural interventions demarcate zones. The obscuring of meaning by language is explored in the installations of Margaret O’Brien, Richard Ducker and Lee Holden where they operate at the pre-linguistic, with Kristevian visceral utterances. Bruno Martelli & Ruth Gibson (igloo) creates installations of virtual landscapes that conflate the imagined with the real as they develop ever-overlapping simulacrums through the language of the video game. Tod Hanson and Alex Schady respond architecturally to the space, using direct interventions, getting their hands dirty with the stuff of the real world, often with a charming wit or Baroque exuberance, while Denise Hawrysio uses the fly poster to create a bricolage of repetition. In the mix of this is Neil Bromwich and Zoe Walker inflatable landscape that addresses socio-political borders – both cultural and national.
In a number of Hollywood films, the hero escapes via the dumbwaiter, thus travelling efficiently from one floor [set] to the next. The exhibition’s curatorial oversight is just this intention of moving between one total experience to another within the space of the building. In this way, the viewer could perceive themselves as the dumbwaiter, travelling silently, unseen, between the rooms/zones, developing a dialogue as one passes through to the next. Alternately, as in Pinter’s play, it could be the curator who is the dumbwaiter, delivering increasingly unhinged instructions to the artists. When Gus leaves the room to get a drink of water in the bathroom, the dumbwaiter's speaking tube whistles. Ben listens carefully. We gather from his replies that their victim has arrived and is on his way to the room. Ben shouts for Gus, who is still out of the room. The door that the target is supposed to enter from flies open, Ben rounds on it with his gun, and Gus enters, stripped of his jacket, waistcoat, tie and gun. There is a long silence as the two stare at each other before the curtain comes down.
JAMES TAYLOR GALLERY
Collent Street
Hackney
E9 6SQ
PRIVATE VIEW: Fri, 20th Nov. 6-9pm
Exhibition runs: 21st Nov - 13th Dec, 2009
Gallery open: Wednesday – Sunday, 12-6pm
Contact: James Taylor Gallery: contact@jamestaylorgallery.co.uk
Fieldgate Gallery: Fieldgategallery@gmail.com; Tel: 07957228351

Fieldgate Gallery Save the date for the PV of our next offsite project at James Taylor Gallery: DUMBWAITER 20 NOVEMBER 2009, 6-9 PM

Fieldgate Gallery
Lee Holden – Tod Hanson - Denise Hawrysio - Alex Schady & Mia Taylor
Margaret O’Brien - Richard Ducker
Zoë Walker & Neil Bromwich - Bruno Martelli & Ruth Gibson (igloo)
As it happens, there is no Dumb Waiter in the building, and one could hardly be imagined, but it remains a useful curatorial metaphor for passing from o...ne environ to another. Each artist is given space to develop a site-specific installation, and in some cases were asked to produce an idiosyncratic response to the space. In Harold Pinter’s play of the same name, which takes place in a basement room, it appears that two hit men, Ben and Gus, are awaiting "orders" regarding their next unknown victim. Simultaneously comic and threatening requests emanate from the unseen operator of the dumbwaiter who appears to be "senior" partner Ben's intended victim at the end of the play. This exercise in semantics and menace corresponds with much of the work in the exhibition.
The word ‘dumb’ in Dumb Waiter implies a stupidity and/or muteness. Yet within this pejorative term of abuse there is a resistance. Muteness has power: it refuses dialogue.
Much of the artwork here exploits this paradox. Language is obfuscated, while sound/noise disguises primal anxieties and architectural interventions demarcate zones. The obscuring of meaning by language is explored in the installations of Margaret O’Brien, Richard Ducker and Lee Holden where they operate at the pre-linguistic, with Kristevian visceral utterances. Bruno Martelli & Ruth Gibson (igloo) creates installations of virtual landscapes that conflate the imagined with the real as they develop ever-overlapping simulacrums through the language of the video game. Tod Hanson and Alex Schady respond architecturally to the space, using direct interventions, getting their hands dirty with the stuff of the real world, often with a charming wit or Baroque exuberance, while Denise Hawrysio uses the fly poster to create a bricolage of repetition. In the mix of this is Neil Bromwich and Zoe Walker inflatable landscape that addresses socio-political borders – both cultural and national.
In a number of Hollywood films, the hero escapes via the dumbwaiter, thus travelling efficiently from one floor [set] to the next. The exhibition’s curatorial oversight is just this intention of moving between one total experience to another within the space of the building. In this way, the viewer could perceive themselves as the dumbwaiter, travelling silently, unseen, between the rooms/zones, developing a dialogue as one passes through to the next. Alternately, as in Pinter’s play, it could be the curator who is the dumbwaiter, delivering increasingly unhinged instructions to the artists. When Gus leaves the room to get a drink of water in the bathroom, the dumbwaiter's speaking tube whistles. Ben listens carefully. We gather from his replies that their victim has arrived and is on his way to the room. Ben shouts for Gus, who is still out of the room. The door that the target is supposed to enter from flies open, Ben rounds on it with his gun, and Gus enters, stripped of his jacket, waistcoat, tie and gun. There is a long silence as the two stare at each other before the curtain comes down.
JAMES TAYLOR GALLERY
Collent Street
Hackney
E9 6SQ
PRIVATE VIEW: Fri, 20th Nov. 6-9pm
Exhibition runs: 21st Nov - 13th Dec, 2009
Gallery open: Wednesday – Sunday, 12-6pm
Contact: James Taylor Gallery: contact@jamestaylorgallery.co.uk
Fieldgate Gallery: Fieldgategallery@gmail.com; Tel: 07957228351
5 new photos

Fieldgate Gallery
PRIVATE VIEW THIS FRIDAY
FIELDGATE GALLERY
Presents
‘MUSEUM CLAUSUM’
as part of:
JTP09
At
JAMES TAYLOR GALLERY
Collent St, Hackney, E9 6SQ
Private View: Fri 16th October, 6-10 pm
Exhibition runs: 14th Oct – 1st Nov, 09.
Open: Monday – Sunday, 12-6pm (closed Monday 26th & Tuesday 27th Oct)
“The Deptford Maritime Mus...eum”, an installation by the Museum Clausum, shows a selection of remarkable objects reflecting on Deptford’s historical link to England’s maritime history. On display will be an eclectic collection of relics that tell surprising stories of private, personal as well as local, national and international significance. The Museum Clausum is a project by artist and collector, Klaus Wehner. The name is adopted from Sir Thomas Browne’s seventeenth-century pamphlet, Musaeum Clausum, which is a written inventory of a fantasy collection of objects and books, produced by Browne as an ironic comment on the Renaissance craze of assembling collections and producing wunderkammern. It is hence an early artistic and personal comment on the artificiality of museum-type display and knowledge. Wehner’s Museum Clausum continues this project to reflect on our relationship to objects and museum and exhibition culture in general. The Museum Clausum has no fixed location and its aim is to stage temporary exhibitions in co-operation with different host institutions. A future project is a collaboration between Sir John Soane’s Museum and the Royal College of Surgeon’s Hunterian Museum for the project Museum Clausum, Autopsia in 2010.
For further information visit: http://www.museumclausum.org Contacts:James Taylor Gallery: contact@jamestaylorgallery.co.ukFieldgat e Gallery: fieldgategallery@gmail.com Links:www.jamestaylorgallery.co.ukwww.fi eldgategallery.comwww.museumclausum.org
JTP09
JT Project 09 is: seven distinct temporary exhibitions hosted by James Taylor Gallery, independently organised by Fieldgate Gallery, Five Years, James Taylor Gallery, Katie Guggenheim, Supine Studios, The Centre of the Universe and Transition Gallery. Spread over two floors of a huge building, the project provides the opportunity to see shows by these peer organisations simultaneously.JT Project 09 could be: an opportunity for new collaborations, a series of compromises, a grand experiment.
www.museumclausum.org

Fieldgate Gallery Wishing you all a very happy holiday season and best wishes for a healthy, peaceful and joyous new year!

Fieldgate Gallery
FIELDGATE GALLERY
off-site project:
SOOT FROM THE FUNNEL
A primary collaboration-project between Fieldgate Gallery, London and Lokaal 01_Breda.
co-curated by Frederik Vergearts (Lokaal 01) and Richard Ducker (Fieldgate Gallery).
Paul Carter
Harald Hund & Paul Horn
Simon Kentgens
Felix Schramm
Kate MccGwire
Sheena Macrae
Erwan Ma...heo
Margaret O'Brien
Christophe Terlinden
Kate Terry
PV: Friday, 21 November 2008
exhibition continues through 21 December 2008
Lokaal 01
Kloosterlaan 138
4811 EE Breda (NL)
www.lokaal01.nl
www.fieldgategallery.com

Fieldgate Gallery
“All is written” wrote Andre Breton. For this exhibition Richard Ducker is making a site-specific work that explores the loss of language using the predicament of the dyslexic child as its starting point. ‘I began to think about my personal moments of childhood shame and they mainly derived from my dyslexia, and cons...equent academic failure. So it felt appropriate to hide beneath the school desk, the weight of academic necessity above me and also concealing me. From this, separate elements began to evolve to build up a narrative of the often awkward relationship between the childhood and adult worlds.’ In this state, thoughts remain unknown, unnameable, and awaiting definition. Loaded with potential, meaning is left desiring description. Through using sculptural elements as suggestive props, Ducker reveals this economic as a state of conflict, as well as loss that is inscribed in both the social and the personal.
Private view: Friday, 10 October, 6-9 pm
Gone Tomorrow Gallery
22-27 The Oval
Bethnal Green
London E2 9DT
www.gonetomorrowgallery.co.uk
www.richardducker.com
Opening hours: Saturday & Sunday, 12-4 pm
Special opening during Frieze weekend:
Friday 17, Saturday 18 & Sunday 19, 12-6 pm
an installation by Richard Ducker
Time:6:00PM Friday, October 10th
Location:Gone Tomorrow Gallery

Fieldgate Gallery
FIELDGATE GALLERY presents
Fluid Foundations
curated by Richard Ducker
Monica Biagioli – John Clayman – Ben Cove – Richard Ducker
Stewart Gough – Kathleen Herbert – Lee Maelzer
Given the inescapable statement of the building’s function, Richard Ducker has curated around the idea of architectural and flights of fancy that re...spond to the strong office sensibility of the space.
The built environment is the landscape which we all occupy, and although architecture has the illusion of permanence, our relationship to it is fluid and often uneasy. It can inspire awe through its spectacle, or be the backdrop to real or cinematic narratives: crime, romance, consumerism, work, recreation. With these sites we experience complex psychological responses, sometimes extreme and often contradictory. There is an accumulation of history, re-animated for the present, while the present lacks stability, slipping back into the historical narrative from which it emerged. Within this, like a soap opera, lie individual stories, human exchanges.
Each of the artists in this exhibition explores in different ways the notion of our relationship to the architectural. Some make a direct reference through their material language, while others explore the more human or domestic. The human presence here tends to be inferred rather than portrayed, and we are left with a landscape of absence and boredom, while fascination is found in the banal and insignificant, and intimations of a longing for a somewhere else beyond the office desk.
PRIVATE VIEW:
Friday, 3rd October, 6pm - late.
Exhibition runs from 4th Oct. to 19th Oct. 2008
Opening hours: Wednesday to Sunday, 12 - 7pm
The Wenlock Building
50-60 Wharf Road
London N1 7RN
Closest tubes: Angel and Old Street
www.fieldgategallery.com
www.v22presents.com
www.v22collection.com
The Wharf Road Project brings more than 20 innovative contemporary art initiatives together for the first time in a central location, creating a seminal showcase for the more unusual and innovative. The Wharf Road Project is not an art fair, but a large-scale exhibition featuring the best of London’s specialist and experimental art spaces, complemented by a programme of performances, screenings, music and guided tours.
Participants have each been allocated one of the 5-storey venue’s rooms to curate exhibitions which reflect their artistic endeavours and curatorial ethos. This mash-up of different organisations will create an opportunity to engage with established art spaces as well as some of the newest and most exciting art initiatives in London.
The Wenlock building is owned by Workspace Group plc who have long been supporters of the arts and London’s creative industries. V22 is the first cooperatively run art collection, owned by artists themselves as well as external investor-patrons. Our ethos is to make the best new art accessible to more people in more ways. The Wharf Road Project is a celebration of artists, their supporters and the wider industry. V22 will feature new works for its collection selected by Martin Westwood and Martin Creed.
PARTICIPANTS INCLUDE: Carter Presents; David Risley; E:vent; The Hex; Parade; Seventeen; Stedefreund, Berlin; Supplement; Frog Morris with Lee Campbell; Matt Williams; Dallas Seitz, Lisa Penny & Trevor Hall; Collecting Live Art; Everyday press; Fieldgate; Igloo; Linda Persson & Natasha Rees; PILOT; Poignancy passing Muster; TOM ROWLAND FINE ART; Truck Art; MOT Presents: THE NEW DOME; Fergal Stapleton, courtesy Carl Freedman; Laura White invites Alison Wilding, Bettina Buck and Phyllida Barlow; Peter Jones, courtesy of Pizza Horse and the Fat Sisters;The David Roberts Art Foundation; Martin Creed for V22; Martin Westwood for V22
Supported by V22, Workspace Group PLC and Arts Council England
Fieldgate at The Wharf Road Project
Time:6:00PM Friday, October 3rd
Location:The Wenlock Building

Fieldgate Gallery
Fluid Foundations
curated by Richard Ducker
Monica Biagioli – John Clayman – Ben Cove – Richard Ducker
Stewart Gough – Kathleen Herbert – Lee Maelzer
PRIVATE VIEW:
Friday, 3rd October, 6pm - late.
Exhibition runs from 4th Oct. to 19th Oct. 2008
Opening hours: Wednesday to Sunday, 12 - 7pm
THE WHARF ROAD PROJECT
The Wenlock Buil...ding
50-60 Wharf Road
London N1 7RN
Closest tubes: Angel and Old Street
www.fieldgategallery.com
Supported by V22, Workspace Group PLC and Arts Council England

Fieldgate Gallery
review of Atkinson - Brisley - Head in Art Review this month:
http://www.artreview.com/main/sharing/sh are?id=1474022%253ATopic%253A462636























