Anne’s Lane, South Anne Street, D02 A028, Dublin, Ireland
Open: Tue-Fri 10am-5.30pm, Sat 11am-4.30pm
Fri 29 Nov 2024 to Sat 18 Jan 2025
Anne’s Lane, South Anne Street, D02 A028 Paul Winstanley: Arcadia
Tue-Fri 10am-5.30pm, Sat 11am-4.30pm
Artist: Paul Winstanley
Kerlin Gallery presents a new exhibition by Paul Winstanley, comprising a new series of paintings titled Arcadia, a continuation of his recent series The Falls, plus the last of his critically acclaimed Veil series, a signature body of work initiated in 1999.
Titled Arcadia, suggesting ‘something ancient being revisited’, this new body of work looks towards early 19th-century paintings of idyllic mountainous landscapes – pictures that have largely lost their significance through the ‘gauze of history’. Seizing upon the more abstract elements of these works, Winstanley revisits the genre from a contemporary standpoint – first ‘degrading’ inkjet prints of the source images, stripping back detail using a process of wax resist, before recreating them as paintings. Through this process of reinvention, the landscapes become spatial encounters – removed from the specificity of place, they instead tune our attention towards atmosphere, presence, and spiritual charge, all while keeping the ‘shadow’ of the original image.
As with Arcadia, Winstanley’s series The Falls captures and distorts the motifs of 19th-century landscape painting – reenergising a particular vista of an Alpine waterfall with vivid, shapeshifting palettes that range from the dusky to the bordering-on psychedelic. Both mountains and waterfalls are central to the Romantic notion of the Sublime, in which a fear and awe at the infinity of space becomes an elevated aesthetic experience. Here, Winstanley searches for ways to enrich the source image with something akin to this sensation through infusions of colour and light, which bleed into and warp the image. Transforming this repeated motif into a shimmering mirage, serialised with varying degrees of abstraction, the series invites us to reflect upon how pictures mythologise reality.
One of Winstanley’s best-known bodies of work, the Veil series was initiated in 1999 and has been revisited intermittently in the 25 years since, reflecting the changing nature of the artist’s work over this time period. In it, the artist returns to a repeated motif of sheer curtains, usually white, that act as a membrane between the viewer and the world behind. At times, the veil conceals the ghostly impression of a landscape, as is the case here. Though literally cloaking us in mystery, the Veil paintings feel rich with luminosity, surface and texture, inviting us to reflect on the feeling of being in the world and gazing at the beyond; the gauziness of memory; as well as the multi-layered nature of painting itself.