Paul Kindersley, lemon ariadne, 2021. © Paul Kindersley (2021).

Paul Kindersley, lemon ariadne, 2021. © Paul Kindersley (2021).

3 December 2021 — 18 December 2021

3 Dec 2021 — 18 Dec 2021

Paul Kindersley:


Meander

an off-site exhibition of Paul Kindersley’s new ceramic works.

 

opening day: Friday 3 December, 12-6pm

34 Bourdon Street London, W1K 3PR

 

opening hours: Tuesday – Saturday: 11am – 5pm


 

Fresh out of the kiln, we are happy to announce an off-site presentation of Paul Kindersley’s new series of ceramic works. Envisioned by Silka Rittson Thomas, Meander, situates Paul’s homely wears alongside the natural bounty of a seasonal garden.

 

Made in collaboration with Dutch ceramicist Els Bottema, in this series the pair utilise a range of ceramic techniques – from hand forming to slab building – intuitive approaches to glazing and experimental methods of firing to explore the alchemy of making. In this way, the relationship between ‘art’ and ‘craft’ is stretched, creating a push pull tension through ceramic formality and painterly abandon; a tension that imbues these clay forms with a lusty energy and unpredictable playfulness. Working with this sense, Paul’s figurative adornments – composed of skeletal line and gestural splurge – further the animism of these otherwise domestic objects.

 

More than fanciful decoration, here Paul has given a new primacy to his characterful forms. Recalling the liturgical and symbolic function of ceramics, the twisted bodies pictured allude to fabled myths and kinky stories – those at the furthest reaches of Paul’s mind. Alongside exuding narrative, Paul’s figures intrude on our interactions with these tablewares: outstretched arms tickle our fruit, lips kiss our own as we drink and eyes stare at our companions as we make small talk. Combining form and function in a uniquely ‘Paul Kindersley’ manner, it is not clear if these ceramic pieces and the friezes that adorn them are offering us protection or coyly chattering behind our backs.

 

Curated with plants, seeds and blooms from Silka’s Oxfordshire garden, Meander, is a continuation of a conversation between the pair. Expressing a sense of magic, the mise-en-scène will create a winter garden – one teeming with imaginative improv-ability.

 

 

for more information please contact gallery@belmacz.com

 

Paul Kindersley (b. 1985, Cambridge, UK), graduated from Cambridge Regional College, before studying Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art & Design. Abundant in their otherworldly unfolding, Paul’s work takes up the mantel left by whimsical intellectuals, such as the Bloomsbury Group. Brought to life through drawing and performance, stage/script and video/film, Paul creates paracosm-like realities filled with absurdity, chance, and lashings of kitsch.

Select exhibitions include: Don’t Let The Bastards Grind You Down, Skypark, Glasgow International (2021); BUMs, SKIP Gallery X DioHoria, Mykonos (2021); Galerie Sultana (2020); Ship of Fools, SKIP Gallery, Selfridges, London (2019); The Cambridge Show, Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge (2019); Lignes de vies – une exposition de légendes, MACVAL, Paris (2019); Henry Darger Summer Camp, Arles (2019); Fake Fairy Fantasies, Belmacz, London (2018); Orlando… at the present time, The Wolfson Gallery, Charleston, Lewes (2018); DRAG, Hayward Gallery, Southbank Centre, London (2018); Narrator, Relator & Stimulator Belmacz, London (2017); Episode 9: Other Worlds Already Exist/ Arika, Tramway, Glasgow (2017); Mad Cow (Life is Random, Why Not All The Rest?), SCAG Contemporary, Vienna (2017); Recasting, Museum of Classical Archeology, Cambridge (2016); Ill Meat, La Fonderie, Geneva (2016); Coming Into Being, Stockholms Universitet, Stockholm (2016); Chateau Double Wide, Glasgow International, Glasgow (2016); #TheBritishAreCumming, Kunstschlager, Reykjavik (2014); #ExtremeDream Makeover, Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham (2014); The Men of 73 & Friends, Centre For Recent Drawing, London (2011); She wanted his soul, but he could only give her his blood, Transition Gallery, London (2009).

Paul has had residencies at Guest Project Space, London (2016); Unilever, London (2015); Cill Rialaig Arts Centre, Ballingskelligs, County Kerry (2014); The Beach Lookout, Alderburgh, Suffolk (2014). He was awarded The Transition Gallery Prize in 2009.

 

Paul has written and directed a feature film trilogy: The Burning Baby (2020); THE IMAGE (2018); and Das Spiel Der Hoffnung (2017).

 

Paul lives and works in London.

 

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Please fill out the form below and we will get back to you. Or you can contact us directly gallery@belmacz.com

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