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The Lloyd Gill Gallery
Lee House
13 Beaconsfield Road
Weston - Super - Mare
Somerset
BS23 1YE
Press Release for October Preview Saturday 18th October 7pm - 10pm
‘A hunger for the alternative draws on the past’
Exhibition runs from Tuesday 21st October to 14th November
Open Tuesday - Saturday, 10pm - 4.30pm Monday and Sunday enquires only
44 01934 623449 email enquiries@thelloydgillgallery.com
This exhibition is receptive towards the techniques of post-modern Art. Through
mining Artists from various sources, Lloyd found many that use the techniques
of appropriation, quotation and pastiche of vernacular cultures such as Philosophy.
The borrowing in many of the Art works on show, have led to parodies of particular
subjects matters and important Artists. Each of the selected Artists have
their own statements which describe the source pools. The exhibition is showing
how parodying in general can lift an Artist head above water in the context
of maturity.
All Artists on show have been personally selected by Lloyd Gill, for there deep understanding of post – modern techniques and application through traditional and non – tradition mediums.
Participating Artists
Katie Elder
Zoë Crosse
Angharad Redman
Sue Mclachlan
Rosie Lesso
Samantha Willoughby
Chris King
James Telford

Katie Elder: © Copyright to the Artist, 2008.
Katie Elder recently graduated at Oxford Brookes University in Fine Art with a BA hons. Katie studied at Byam School of Art for a foundation diploma after successfully completing A’ levels at Channing School – London
‘Katie inspiration often comes from what other artists are doing. Antony
Micallef, for example, for his technique and the way he controls the charcoal.
His work has led Katie to embark on her third year project while on her degree.
Looking at Greek myths, in particular the creation and Pegasus stories. I
have spent time collecting imagery to create my own mythical creatures, to
put across the dramatic, violent, excruciating pain of birth (‘Creation’,
fig. 1). These works also show that however intelligent and sophisticated
the human race is, birth unites all female mammals in this animalistic, uncontrollable,
ferocious act.
The artists who, over the years, have inspired me to pursue a career as an
artist are Edward Hopper, Lucian Freud and Eric Fischl. I admire their work
for their varied styles, context, composition and wide range of colours. All
three are especially united for me because they so often tackle the challenge
of the human figure.’
Zoë Crosse © Copyright to the Artist, 2008.
Zoë Crosse recently graduated with a B.A. Fine Art First Class Honours
Degree in Painting., at the London Metropolitan University 2008.
Zoë has a previous degree in B.ED. Hons. Degree. Education. Middlesex
University 1987, which enabled her to do teaching full time.
It has been written that Post modern parodies occur when elements of one work
are lifted and reused, though not necessarily ridiculed. For a Post-Modern
artist such as Zoë Crosse, parody is a means of connecting with a past
ousted by enlightenment and mediated by modernity; of course the differences
inspired by modernity have to be registered.
Parody is inherent in Zoë’s process on a very physical level, as
Zoë experiment’s with the techniques of illusion used by the old
masters, though Zoë may juxtapose the art of illusion with reference
to the process and to the idea of surface.
Thus far, all her work has evolved from and been driven by an intrigue with
identity. Zoë has studied fragments of philosophy, researching the ideas
of self and of reality. A myriad of philosophical ideas now inspire and infect
my work, not only by providing subject matter, but also by providing a means
of understanding and creating an effective process.
Though Zoë admits to being a fledgling in the area of philosophy I have
parodied the basics of my possibly basic understanding of philosophers such
as Foucault, Nietzsche, Baudrillard, Derrida and Sartre, in my painting process.
Her projects produce sets of works which have a unity, but projects differ
from each other in style, form and content. She responds to each project with
different techniques and aims, working at times with only a few basic under
painting colours, then at other times using a far more Baroque or painterly
approach.
More than anyone or anything, Zoë feel’s that listening to Francis
Bacon speak about his process helped me overcome her fear of her own process.
Zoë would have to say, at this point in time, that if I could link my
work in any way, to notions of parody then would have to be in identifying
with a statement he made and making it into a philosophy which she parody
daily.

Sue Mclachlan © Copyright to the Artist, 2008.
Sue Mclachlan graduated with a BA Hons degree and MA in Fine Art at Winchester University. In 2008. Her MA Fine Art Project is titled ‘Knowing, Not Knowing’ and explores the idea of an internal space. Internal spaces, that we can’t see and displacement from the difficulties of gaining knowledge through sound.
The concept of Displacement is about an embodied experience, Sue wanted to
encompass experiences of being taken somewhere else by not being able to see
what can be heard, hearing something you don’t understand, uncertainty,
frustration and not knowing.
Influences include the film ‘Innocence’ by Lucile Hadzihalilovic
with her strange and arresting visual experience of displacement. Sue has
used grids to prevent access, negate visuals and their heavy, weighty appearance
gives a feeling of an internal and blocked experience. Sue has misplaced these
materials to give a visual displacement. The drawing on the floor are her
interpretation of sound, its inner starting point to its blockage and the
need to penetrate as does sound arrest me constantly and can do for the blind
also.
The sounds displace by confusing and make us aware of an internal space. Both sound and visual experiences are completely out of character within a white walled space.
This improvisation of placing and replacing their position is like a Jazz performance, not knowing what the result will be. The not knowing and the unexpected moments of experience have always been part of the work. This scary but exciting prospect is the concept and the practice.
As an artist Sue has really enjoyed using her experiences and that of those Sue has been interested in through sound in response to the architecture of a space.
© Copyright to the Artist, 2008.
Angharad Redman
Angharad received a degree in Fine Art (specialising in Print Making) at Cardiff
School of Art and Design, University of Wales Institute Cardiff, 2008. She
will be studying for a Postgraduate Diploma in Fine Art at Central Saint Martins,
Byam Shaw School of Art, London, from 2008-2009. Recent exhibitions have included
‘New Wave Exhibition’, Bute Space Gallery, Cardiff Bay; and ‘Degree
Show 2008’, Howard Gardens, Cardiff School of Art and Design, both 2008.
Her work is intended to reflect “my ‘hands on’ creative
nature and my equal loves of both art and music.
The work depicts her own hands whilst playing the violin. She wanted to show
her hands in a range of positions throughout the course of a piece of music,
in this instance the piece of her choice was Vaughan Williams ‘The Lark
Ascending’.
Angharad wanted the work to really reflect the concentration and focus involved
in playing the violin. Finding that the level of concentration involved in
producing these drawings is, She believes equal to that when playing my violin.
She hopes the work reflects the level of studied concentration involved in
these two very different art forms; both of which are so dear to Angharad.
Rosie Lesso
© Copyright to the Artist, 2008.
Rosie Lesso completed her MA in Contemporary Art Theory at Edinburgh College
of Art in 2004 and received a BA (hons) Drawing and Painting at Edinburgh
College of Art in 2002.
Rosie works as a free lance writer for important Art journal such as AN magazine
and Art monthly.
Rosie Lesso has exhibited extensively through out Scotland and London. Her
work is collected by important institutions in Edinburgh and She has won and
been Short listed for numerous awards including The Paisley Drawing Prize,
Paisley Museums and Galleries, Glasgow in 2007. New Writing Scotland Prize,
The Collective Gallery, Edinburgh 2005Andrew Grant Drawing Prize, Edinburgh
College of Art 2001.
Negotiating and hybridizing a vast array of imagery is central to my work.
These drawings are created via an evolving and layering process which brings
together a range of references from art history books, newspaper images and
found objects to create disorderly open ended images.
They are partially inspired by the complex dynamism of Jacopo Bassano’s
16th century figure compositions and their rich and varied colour schemes.
They also look towards Hieronymus Bosch’s surreal Renaissance panel
paintings and his chiaroscuro effects to suggest form, life and narrative.
Along with these influences Rosie is inspired by more accessible, illustrative
styles from botanical drawings to newspaper illustrations and the choice to
use pen and ink reflects this interest in readily available visual imagery
and advertising culture. They also combine fragments from domestic or studio
objects, such as old canvases, furniture and kitchen utensils.
The encyclopedic sources are united to create surreal landscapes which suggest
an event or happening is taking place across the minimal white ground, however
the direct meaning is abstracted to create ambiguity, leaving piled up or
fragmented forms suggesting movement and division.

Samantha Willoughby © Copyright to the Artist, 2008
Samantha has recently graduated with a Painting, Fine Art Ba(Hons) from the
University of Wales Institute Cardiff in 2002.
Before going to Cardiff, Samantha succeeded in gaining her Foundation Art
and Design National Diploma from the University College Falmouth.
My passion for painting really began when I was shown paintings from the
masters such as Monet and Cézanne whilst still in primary school. Then
when I moved to secondary school I was introduced to my favourite painting
of all, “Girl with a Pearl Earring” by Vermeer. To Samantha, this
was art. This was something that She wanted to aspire to achieve in her own
art work. The detail, the smoothness of her face and the concentration of
light on the pearl and other points of the painting, all fascinated Samantha.
Once She started her degree She went to Amsterdam and from there She went
to see the actual painting itself. Samantha felt so lucky to stand in front
of the Vermeer painting and look at the work properly for the first time.
Throughout all of her art work, Vermeer’s painting has been constantly
in the back of my head, and it wasn’t until my final year that She found
a way of bringing out this wonderful reference and using it to its potential.
For my final show I wanted to combine my love for big cats with the human
form. It was an experiment to say the least, but it also brought about some
interesting questions about who we are as humans. For the smaller paintings,
Samantha concentrated on just the head, making tight little brush marks that
blended the colours together almost seamlessly. Blacking out the background
and putting in one focal light source, just as Vermeer had done in his pieces
all those centuries ago, made the pieces powerful and thought provoking.

Chris King © Copyright to the Artist, 2008
Chris King graduated at Bath Spa University College
Located in Bath. Studied Fine Art Sculpture from 1999 – 2001,
Studied Fine Art Painting and Photography 2001 – 2003.
BA (Hons) Fine Art Chris King studied at Weston Super-Mare College
Located in Weston Super-Mare Hans Price Art and Science Studied 1 Year Fine
Art Foundation from 1998 – 1999. Contemporary Art 2007 August 24th -
September 21st
The Lloyd Gill Gallery Lee House Beaconsfield Road Weston - Super - Mare Somerset
BS23 1YE
One of Chris’s main influences was the artist Gary Hume. Chris found it interesting the way that he radically simplified the components and form of an image down to their bare essentials. Chris found the particular work of Humes, 'Kate' from 1996, and 'Water Painting' from 1999 very absorbing.
As part of the curation of this exhibition, Lloyd asked Chris to recall a few quotations relating to his work.
"Simplicity is not an objective in art, but one achieves simplicity
despite one's self by entering into the real sense of things. "
CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI
"All you get from me is surface."
GARY HUME
The artwork ‘Alley’, Chris Kings own work, was made from an image from a fashion magazine in a broadsheet newspaper. Then Chris scanned it into the computer and played around with the image, hacking away the unessential detail in the photo. So his paintings are almost always planned meticulously on computer before he even get to the painting process itself.
Chris has in the last 12 months become very inspired by the new wave of Japanese artists. The collective term is 'J ART', which is an abbreviation of Japanese Pop Art. Chris’s favourite artists are the Tokyo based Takashi Murakami and Yoshitomo Nara.
James Telford © Copyright to the Artist, 2008
James Telford
James studied for a Foundation University of Hertfordshire and completed
in 2004 and gained a Distinction.
James studied for a BA Hons/ Fine Art at the University of Wales Institute
Cardiff and gained a 1st class hons completed in 2008
The Spanish school of painters, in particular Joan Miro, have always held a fascination for James in the development of my art. However, it was during his third year of study at Cardiff University of Wales Institute Cardiff that Joan Miro became a major influence in the shaping and direction of his Art. In developing his own style Miro claimed that his inner landscape was just as important as the “real” world, and that at times he neglected physical surroundings, instead depending on his inner reality, spirit and imagination. This approach fascinates James, how he reflects his world with his iconic style, through painting that becomes a mythic expression. This value was very important to Miro and he rejected the notion that his work merely represented pure “abstraction”. James was lucky enough to win a department prize that allowed me to visit Barcelona in January 2008 and once again enjoy the outstanding works of this great artist. It is the playful use of line and form and the way shapes take on a lyrical role within his compositions, and the fact that he never appears to lose his humour in presenting the absurd that has drawn James to Miro’s work.
In his own work James has tried to include the use of invention and construction from the most simplistic forms and shapes. In particular, he tries to play with just pure forms floating in a space. Having no specific grounding, these objects are in a playground of James imagination. Within this context, Miro helps James to understand the importance of poetry and freedom in painting, and in having fun creating a composition out of the most simplistic imagery. James paintings tend to become more complex as his is inclined to work on a much wider scale and these objects become more in a grounded world and portray a more specific notion but still carry the lyrical banter of his sketches. Whatever the form of my work the inspiration of Miro is always evident.
Tel. +44 01934 623449
enquiries@thelloydgillgallery.com