King Rat

King Rat

Project Arts Centre

David Bennewith & Joseph Churchward (NZ/WS), ‘Ampersand’, 2009
Plans for wall drawing from Joseph Churchward’s typeface ‘Maori’, 1981-1984

July 5, 2010

King Rat
David Bennewith & Joseph Churchward, Heman Chong, Matthias Bitzer, Isabel Nolan, David Noonan and Pae White
9 July – 4 September 2010

Opening:
Thursday, 8 July, from 6-8pm

gallery [​at​] projectartscentre.ie
39 East Essex Street, Temple Bar
Dublin 2, Ireland

www.projectartscentre.ie

All was dark and silent, the black shadows thrown by the moonlight seeming full of a silent mystery of their own. Not a thing seemed to be stirring, but all to be grim and fixed as death or fate; so that a thin streak of white mist, that crept with almost imperceptible slowness across the grass towards the house, seemed to have a sentience and a vitality of its own.

A black-as-night landscape (Heman Chong) is spread out across the floor, and shifting papers rustle underfoot. Out of this stage climb plinths and sculptures – characters, models and abstract forms. The sculptures, wall paintings, tapestries and paintings are momentarily frozen in time, and as you glance away, continue their secret motion. Curling clouds of smoke drift along the wall (Pae White). Dead, destroyed sails catch the wind while Fernando Pessoa and Alistair Crowley quietly commune (Matthias Bitzer). The semi-transparent, seemingly celluloid frames that have been trapped and layered on top of each other continue their flash-frame loops (David Noonan) while patterns and markings familiar to indigenous New Zealand Maori morph into a large ampersand (Joseph Churchward & David Bennewith). The tapestry continues its happy animation, the balls fall (Isabel Nolan), and like the many-headed rat made famous by superstition and mythology, the artworks’ performances mess with each others’ meaning, autonomy and precariousness.

The mist grew thicker and thicker and I could see now how it came in, for I could see it like smoke – or with the white energy of boiling water – pouring in, not through the window, but through the joinings of the door. It got thicker and thicker, till it seemed as if it became concentrated into a sort of pillar of cloud in the room, through the top of which I could see the light of the gas shining like a red eye.

—from Mina Harker’s Journal, Dracula

King Rat is an environment in which each artist and artwork inhabits their own universe of complications, with form and aesthetics resting easily beside history, context and imagination. Within the entanglement of art and nightmare, shadows form amidst a prevailing sense of unease. Beauty, intrigue and formal abstraction rest against an intangible performative presence, where the possibility of horror and violence enters the room through allusions to folklore, superstition, ghost-stories and the shifty appropriation of culture. Absent from the scene is that most blood-thirsty of characters – replaced instead by an entangled giant – the writhing, breathing King Rat*.

Curated by Tessa Giblin

Please contact Publicist Aisling McGrane for further press information: aisling@projectartscentre.ie

Project Arts Centre is a multidisciplinary arts centre, with a gallery and two theatre spaces, located at the heart of artistic activity in Dublin. For the archive of exhibition and events from the visual arts programme, follow www.projectartscentre.ie/archive/visual-arts .

With thanks to the artists and lenders, Galerie Iris Kadel, Karlsruhe, 1301PE, Los Angeles, Kerlin Gallery, Dublin and HOTEL, London. Thanks also to the Goethe Institut Dublin for supporting King Rat.

Project Arts Centre | 39 East Essex Street | Temple Bar | Dublin 2 | Ireland
+353 1 881 9613 | Open Mon – Sat, 11am – 8pm (closed for public holiday on Monday 2nd August)

* There are very few recorded examples of ‘rat kings’ in the world, but it is an extraordinary yet natural phenomenon. When a litter of young rats are in the nest, their tails can occasionally become intertwined and ensnared in materials such as horse hair, twine or dried blood, trapping them in a mass formation of bodies growing amongst the interlocked throng of tails. Growing heavier over years, and reliant on feeding from parents, the King Rat is known to have crashed through a ceiling, indicating irrefutably the presence of witches in the home, or the harbinger of disease.

Project Arts Centre, Dublin

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