PHIL FILBY & ROB ROOT
  • Phil Filby & Rob Root Gallery Presentation © Neil Smallbone
  • Works by Phil Root © Neil Smallbone
  • Works by Phil Root © Neil Smallbone
  • Rob Filby, P.R. © Neil Smallbone
  • Rob Filby's Mood Boards (Tongue & Casing) © Neil Smallbone
  • Phil Filby & Rob Root Gallery Presentation © Neil Smallbone
  • Works by Rob Filby, pictured at night. © Neil Smallbone
  • Works by Rob Filby, pictured at night. © Neil Smallbone

Phil Filby & Rob Root is the first exhibition of 2011 within the Wysing Arts Contemporary series of exhibitions. The reversal of names in the title is reflective of the collaborative aspect of this two person show, on display from 30 April – 5 June. All works in the exhibition are for sale and limited edition artworks by both artists will also be available to purchase, including a new work by Phil Root co-commissioned with Hidde van Seggelen Gallery.

 

Phil Root explores painting through different mediums to create multi-layered environments that can be viewed as whole or separate entities. The motivation to create an environment rather than a singular work is so that people can have a bodily, as well as intellectual, interaction with the work.

 

Untitled (Legs) was inspired from a figure in a tarot card and is deliberately medieval. The patterning and bordering are suggestive of card like qualities, bringing out its relationship to image and object. The work is also the basis of the limited edition screen print produced for the show. One of Root’s most striking pieces features ceramic bowls on top of an ice plinth, which will gradually melt over the course of the exhibition leaving the bowls floating in a trough of water. The piece explores the idea of erasure and references works by Francis Picabia such as En faveur de la critique (1945). Root will be exhibiting a range of new work created especially for the exhibition including installation, sculpture, ceramics, paintings and wall drawings.

 

Rob Filby’s practice is object orientated, but crosses into the two dimensional in the series Mood Boards which imagines future works, and the Work & Co. photographs which document his sculpture in the company of cats. In an exhibition space he fills with musk incense, Filby will be exhibiting a new body of sculptural work including re-conditioned glow-in-the-dark agricultural parts, re-coloured newspaper, and a sausage casing 'necklace'. Filby's practice is interested in the meaning and unmeaning object, and amused by the possibility of communication through such convoluted and obtuse means as art making. His limited edition comprises an insertion into a local paper advertising some of the exhibited works as for sale.

 

The exhibition opens on 30 April (4-6pm) with a talk by writer David Lillington on the work of Phil Root and Rob Filby and launch of the book on Filby Sculpture, Craft, Magic. Broccoli, Glass, Mariah, Pyramid, Stem by Lillington and the artist, published by Kaavous-Bhoyroo. Plus, the ever popular artist-led family den building in the woods of Wysing returns in the afternoons of 30 April & 1 May. The closure of the exhibition will be marked by a discussion on 5 June (2-4pm) entitled Thinking Around Exhibitions, led by Hugh Pilkington, about some of the commercial aspects of exhibitions and exhibition making.

 

 

View or Download Exhibition Handout

 

View or Download Flyer (artwork by Phil Root)

 

View or Download Flyer (artwork by Rob Filby)

 

 

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Current

THE COSMOS

12 - 27 May 2012

 

 

Brought together for a six-week residency under the metaphor The Cosmos, and taking the past, origins and knowledge as starting points, artists Salvatore Arancio, Flora Parrott, Nilsson Pflugfelder and Stuart Whipps present a range of new work in the gallery and across Wysing’s site.

 

Each artist has developed a distinct body of work in response to this residency and through conversations with a range of local experts and enthusiasts in a programme of public events and informal meetings aimed at exploring the huge concepts that constitute our understanding of The Cosmos. These new works explore, in some way, the manner in which we structure knowledge in science, spiritualism and in human culture more generally. This period of research has generated the beginnings of many projects and the works shown here are the first iteration of larger bodies of work that the artists will continue to develop.

 

Salvatore Arancio has developed a series of works playing the visualisation of science and the merging of fact and myth in knowledge. Drawing on his interest in historic illustrations of geological discoveries he is exhibiting a large screen-print of minute grains of a piece of granite, alongside a series of small collage works. A series of new works in clay, undergoing a period of drying before being fired, are shown in our ceramics studio, where they have been made.  Our recycled structure Amphis, 2008, is the location for the screening of a video made entirely from clips from the series The Cosmos by Carl Sagan with a new soundtrack by Arancio. The film encompasses imagery picturing theories from physics, the human body and built environments through history and has the visionary, almost psychedelic, low-fi appearance of a 1980s vision of the future.

 

The sculptural works developed by Flora Parrott during this residency and presented in the gallery, attempt to think through abstract concepts using manipulated organic materials including coal, silk and oyster shells. Four compositions of images and objects act as frameworks to understand four particular concepts: deep time and compression, singularity and expansion and interconnectedness and the primordial mound. Through research into the use of Mandalas, ancient tools for spiritual focus, Parrott has been exploring the physical and psychological filters that people instinctively put in place that allow us to define the limits of conscious thought and prevent constant contemplation of enormous, paralysing ideas. The works presented here could act as frameworks that interrupt or disrupts these filters to allow fluid thought.

 

The work of Nilsson Pflugfelder (Magnus Nilsson and Ralf Pflugfelder) is situated on the intersection of critical spatial design, architecture, art and discourse. As a response to The Cosmos they have proposed a large, gleaming outdoor structure to be situated in the grounds of Wysing. This galvanised steel triangle will act as a contemporary folly-like space with no obvious function and no obvious entrance. Although the sculpture will have a minimal, futuristic feel, its typology, proportions and atmosphere reference ancient structures. The lack of discernible purpose for this strangely rarefied space may give it the feeling of a site of pilgrimage. Within the gallery is sited a black object which will become the central element of the structure, once complete.

 

Stuart Whipps often takes overlooked narratives from recent history as the starting point for making films and images. During The Cosmos he has been researching Edward James, an eccentric character who used his personal wealth, power and influence to solidify and materialise his unconventional beliefs. Whipps will present a series of images taken in Las Pozas; James’ surrealist concrete garden (built from 1949 – 1984) set in the rainforest in Mexico. The images, projected medium format slides, show the casts used to make the concrete sculptures, the sculpture and its surrounding forest.

 

 

This year artist Patrick Coyle is documenting our residency programme through performance and writing. At 6.30pm on 12 May, Coyle will present a performative tour interpreting the works of the four residency artists. Documentation of this will be available in Wysing’s reception alongside a reading area and further information on all the artists.

 

The exhibition continues until 27 May and is open daily, 12-5pm.

The Cosmos is funded by Arts Council England and Paul Hamlyn Foundation.

Past

 
 
© 2012 WYSING ARTS CENTRE