Institute of Contemporary Arts

Lis Rhodes: Dissonance and Disturbance 25 January 2012 - 25 March 2012

Fiona Jardine

Installations using sculpture, drawing and photography.

Fiona Jardine is in the Upper Gallery from 27 October - 2 November.

Galvanised by a constellation of literary influences – Rabelais, TS Eliot and Bret Easton Ellis to name a few – Fiona Jardine (born Galashiels, 1970, lives in Glasgow) creates work engaged in crossovers between pre-Enlightenment and contemporary cultural conditions. Such intersections are evident both in the artist's holistic approach to her craft – Jardine commits to the production of the work herself rather than using external or specialist processes – and also in the diversity of the materials Jardine employs.

Using polystyrene, wallpaper, papier-mâché and wax, as well as more conventional media including photography and collage, the artist constructs decidedly sensual experiences. Jardine is interested primarily in collage, however, which serves as a practical working method and as a process which seeks not so much to juxtapose images or phrases in order to generate new meanings, but rather attempts to amalgamate discrete objects and images and ideas into a seamless whole. And while distinct interpretations vary from one object to the next, Jardine connects individual works through ambient associations in order to generate alternative and divergent narratives.

One work, (Pillar), formed part of solo exhibition April is the Cruellest Month (2006). A freestanding expanded polystyrene column coated in a slick high-gloss paint, Jardine's totemic object appears reminiscent of American artist Paul McCarthy's scatological aesthetic. This folly is neither ossified enough to become a monument, nor natural enough to seem biological. Instead it appears to occupy a liminal space between these two conflicting states, aping the form of the classical column with its fantastical and sickly architecture.

In stark contrast to the artificial putrescence of April is the Cruellest Month, meanwhile, is Jardine's Moltke's Eye (2007) – an exhibition which assumed the cool and stylised sheen of a monochromatic 80s interior. Having papered the whitewashed walls of Sorcha Dallas in Glasgow with intermittent columns of black and white, to create a pattern reminiscent of television static, Jardine then preceeded to hang a series of black and white figurative photographs. Presenting a suited male in various poses – seated, or else crumpled on a bare mattress – the figure's face is obscured by a bulbous, glossy black mask, which serves as a comic void or orifice. The motif of the ball-headed figure in Moltke's Eye – also present in photograph series They Became What They Beheld (2007) – makes a suggestive link with Eliot and Absurdist theatre, most notably Alfred Jarry and Samuel Beckett in particular. Additionally, the work seeks to harness the formal aspects of protagonist Patrick Bateman's apartment in Ellis' novel American Psycho.

For Nought to Sixty Jardine extends the collage element of her practice, viscerally connecting it with an interest in the human body as raw material. Using images primarily torn from women's fashion magazines, Jardine has reconfigured body parts into a grotesque design of skin and limbs. In two collages Jardine pastes disembodied hands into the shape of a sphere, which recalls the map of Dante's Inferno – where the levels of underworld are presented as concentric circles – and also as a sphincter – an image that the artist describes as an "ingesting, consuming" rather than an excreting hole.

Jardine's work deploys bodies with a brutal visionary approach reminiscent of arcane or medieval religious imagery. The primary source for Jardine in this instance is the writhing mass of bodies in Luca Signorelli's fresco The Damned Cast Into Hell (1499-1503). With a gothic sensibility and dark humour, the artist uses the seemingly innocuous space of the white cube to support a symbolic realm.

Isla Leaver-Yap

Nought to Sixty in pictures: Fiona Jardine

Photo: Fiona Jardine, For Patrick Photo: Fiona Jardine, For Patrick Photo: Fiona Jardine, For Patrick Photo: Fiona Jardine, For Patrick Photo: Fiona Jardine, For Patrick Photo: Fiona Jardine, For Patrick

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Nought to Sixty: Artists and Projects

A cumulative lists of all artists and projects involved in Nought to Sixty.

 

About Nought to Sixty

Nought to Sixty presents sixty projects by emerging artists based in Britain and Ireland over six months from 5 May to 2 November 2008.

 

Most of the artists in Nought to Sixty are under thirty-five, few of them have had significant commercial exposure, and in most cases this is their first opportunity to mount a solo project in a major public space.

 

The season is not intended to announce any new generation or style, but to build up a multifaceted portrait of the emerging art scene in the two countries, and to provide a space for exchange.

 

The Nought to Sixty programme consists of:

 

 

Events happen at the ICA every Monday night:

 

 

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Nought to Sixty is supported by:

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Other partners:

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