Dynamic Entropy: Ford, Kawakami, Platt, Sawa at Houldsworth

Dynamic Entropy: Ford, Kawakami, Platt, Sawa at Houldsworth

Houldsworth

October 12, 2006

Dynamic Entropy

LAURA FORD, KOUNOSUKE KAWAKAMI, ROBERT PLATT, HIRAKI SAWA

11 October – 18 November 2006

Sunday 15 October, 10 am – 1pm: Champagne Brunch at Houldsworth at which the Artists will be present

At Houldsworth, the artists in Dynamic Entropy fizz with a thirst for surreal connection and dreamlike, entropic creation. In the heat of a thermodynamic art-historical reaction, surrealism, illustration, romantic-expressionism and pop-art appropriation combine to create a heady mix of explosive art, that satisfies our sophisticated taste for visual confusion, whilst offering a biting satirical and referential commentary.

Airplanes and horses roam silently around Hiraki Sawa’s apartment, whilst a psychedelic cuckoo clock shimmers on top of a wood grain effect canvas, in a painting by Robert Platt. Platt’s imagery, from decorative patterns of wallpaper and Royal Dalton, suggest his own predilection for a non-cool, anti-contemporary taste and yet the inverted colours and mind-blowing pixilation speak of the impossibilities of photoshop and video jockeys from 90s raves. It is as if Grandma is on acid, staring bleary-eyed at her mantle piece clock full of knick-knacks.

Sawa’s displacement is magical and whimsical, yet he is not wandering lonely as a cloud along river banks, but floating as lonely as a plane across the bland interior of his cramped London flat. Both Sawa and Platt convey a sense of magnitude through textured manipulation; painted montage, still image as moving plane.

Laura Ford’s new works, anarchic little Bunny Boys, look set to jump on to the scene, rucksacks on backs, as we contemplate their intentions – zealous fanatics or children enjoying playtime? In the main space, Ford’s motorcyclist has come to a cataclysmic halt, kneeling, stumbling, not quite man, not quite animal, in bikers leathers, collapsed without the security of his machinery. Terrorism, not as political tinder, but as a foil for Ford’s ongoing investigations into our fear and attraction towards the unfamiliar and the misunderstood, has become the loci of her recent sculptures. Ford’s works induce discomfort and sympathy in equal measure.

A fine balance between the picturesque and the bombastic gives an immense power to Kawakami’s melting landscapes. Working in collage and painting, Kawakami shifts between a delicate romantic style and a bold computerized surrealism. The unpopulated landscapes hint at a sci-fi view of a world, whereas the strange shapes moving over the works are somewhere between Japanese wallpaper and surrealist flotsam. Somehow this combination works with finesse, as a silent metaphor for a mediated view of the world.

Laura Ford’s recent solo exhibitions include 51st Venice Biennale, Camden Arts Centre, Arnolfini, Bristol, Centre of Contemporary Art, Salamanca, Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh and currently New Art Centre, Roche Court. Also exhibited recently at Rohkunstbau, Berlin; Miami Art Museum; Aldrich Museum, Connecticut and ICA, London. Works in collections of the Tate; Arts Council; Contemporary Art Society; Government Art Collection; New Art Gallery, Walsall; Miami Art Museum and Museum of Art, Iowa.

Houldsworth has just taken on representation of talented young Japanese painter Kounosuke Kawakami who is to have a solo exhibition at the gallery in 2007.

Robert Platt ex Royal College of Art, London, now lives and works in Kyoto, Japan. He was a prizewinner in the Vision of Contemporary Art at the Ueno Royal Museum, Tokyo in 2006, and was also part of Practically Sublime, El Hanappe Underground, Athens. Platt is represented in Japan by Gallery Koyanagi.

Hiraki Sawa’s solo exhibitions include Hirshhorn Museum, Washington; Saint Louis Art Museum; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; Firstsite, Colchester, Hayward/Bloomberg Commission at Hayward Gallery. He was recently part of Yokohama Triennial, Japan, the Valencia Biennial and Aichi Prefectural Museum of Art, Japan and will participate in Seoul International Media Art Biennale later this month. Sawa is represented in New York by James Cohan Gallery. In 2007 Sawa will have a solo exhibition at Chisenhale Gallery, London.

Houldsworth

50 Pall Mall Deposit

124-128 Barlby Road

London

W10 6BL

t 44 (0)20 8969 6166

f 44 (0)20 8969 6209

e gallery@houldsworth.co.uk

w http://www.houldsworth.co.uk

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