
Liquid Frictions brings together the work of 15 artists from around the world who draw and extract from a myriad of present conditions and histories. Presented within the context of a unique imaginary space designed by Italian architect Riccardo Fornoni, the space exists as a combination of ancient ruination, traditional architectural forms and contemporary sensibilities. It is a digital experience that looks both backwards and forwards, providing a stimulating environment for a collection of paintings reflecting on the factors that are continuously shaping our personal and collective understanding of how we live in the parameters of history, and how that has informed the creation of our contemporary narratives. Hand in hand, the exhibition deals with what it means to engage with painting today, together with the idea of painting as an inquiry tool, a set of questions, a means of sampling from the world around us, as well as a vehicle from which many realities and dimensions can be experienced. + Read more
Throughout the exhibition, a series of contrasting themes, ideas and explorations present us with contradictions and polarities. Every work exists within a fluid state, an outburst of the multiple, where a collection of reflections, concerns, relationships and experiences are brought to the fore for them to continue to exist and develop through us, in our minds and imaginations. The works in Liquid Frictions present us with scenes within the context of private and public spaces, popular culture and social media, as well as the depiction of women in painting, androgyny, religious iconography, psychological landscapes, healing bodies of water, organic temples and voids undefined by figurative subject matter.
Within Liquid Frictions, and painting more broadly, the works exist as a series of samples. Slices of the outer world, glimpses of inner worlds, snippets of sensations, ideas, philosophies, art histories, of us…of what we deem important, unimportant, of what we desire and what we can imagine. There is an extraction and distillation process that leads to what a painting depicts. It's a method under constant negotiation and subject to change, as we continue to bring what we learn to the conversation the sense of exploration expands, as new work has the possibility of redefining and recontextualising what it was that came before, and after. Sampling is to get a fragment that shows, suggests or at times even confronts us with what the rest could be, what lies here but also beyond. This has been a constant in painting from its origins and remains relevant today. In a different sense of the word, sampling could also exist as information that we gather in response to a question, usually because we seek answers–– but the sample is never the conclusion nor a guarantee that it’ll take us to one, we however, take chances and dig deep. + Read more
The difference between today and paintings that have come before, is that today's paintings are in a unique position to respond to the legacies that have been developed up to this specific point, and can do so, not just for the sake of seeking newness or originality, but to grasp what was left unsaid, marginalized or even silenced. We are also at a specific historical and technological point where we have access to countless new and instantaneous resources, but we are tragically endangering the vital resources we need not only to thrive but to ensure our future existence as a species. We are living in a time where conflict is a constant, information wars are a reality and where we’re still facing the consequences of old, divisive and hegemonic norms, standards and ideals. The artists within Liquid Frictions are part of generations experiencing, processing and responding to these subjects directly or indirectly, but they all are grappling with questions and creating direct and speculative works reflecting their realities, what they’re undergoing, went through or could undergo in relation to ongoing events unfolding in our world.
In Liquid Frictions, intuitive, absurd, decolonial, anthropomorphic, bodily and animalistic forces come together to orchestrate a situation that at times, alludes to a narrative but that is ultimately reflecting upon a range of modes of communication, living and healing. Through world-making, the artists challenge vision beyond the rational, in this way transcending logic along with the limitations of conventional language. From this perspective, the works within Liquid Frictions sample from, whilst simultaneously bleed into, the imaginary, the psychological as well as the lived and the encountered today. The exhibition provides counter-voices and alternative views beyond a self-reverential fine art sphere, as the artists offer a range of insights into fantastical dimensions, emotional experiences, complex histories as well as societal realities and mythologies. Ultimately, the artists within Liquid Frictions openly broaden conversations, give a voice, foster an atmosphere of curiosity and continue to process and deepen our understanding of the world around us, and our place in it. + Read less
+ Read less
In Liquid Frictions, intuitive, absurd, decolonial, anthropomorphic, bodily and animalistic forces come together to orchestrate a situation that at times, alludes to a narrative but that is ultimately reflecting upon a range of modes of communication, living and healing.
The exhibition provides counter-voices and alternative views beyond a self-reverential fine art sphere, as the artists offer a range of insights into fantastical dimensions, emotional experiences, complex histories as well as societal realities and mythologies.
The artists within Liquid Frictions openly broaden conversations, give a voice, and continue to process and deepen our understanding of the world around us, and our place in it.
ARTWORKS
KOSHIRO AKIYAMA
Waiting in vain, 2021
Acrylic and ink on canvas
100 × 150 cm
KOSHIRO AKIYAMA
Bathing, 2021
Acrylic and ink on wood panel
30 × 40 cm
JANE HAYES GREENWOOD
The Temple, 2020
Oil on linen
110 x 90 cm
ÁNGELA FERRARI
La caza no es un deporte, 2022
Oil on canvas
60 X 20 cm
SEBASTIÁN HIDALGO
Acrisol, 2019
Oil on linen
46 x 33 cm
OTHIANA ROFFIEL
We have forgotten it is she that calls us, when we think about calling her, 2021
Oil on canvas
68 x 86.5 cm
ALLAN VILLAVICENCIO
Dulces notas, 2022
Oil on linen
40 x 32 cm
SALLY JEROME
Hotbed, 2020
Oil on canvas
50.8 x 71.12 cm
MARIJKE VASEY
We are the centuries, 2022
Oil, acrylic and aerosol on canvas
60 x 80 cm
PAULA TURMINA
Hot House, 2021
Oil on canvas
100 x 80 cm
LINDSEY JEAN MCLEAN
Snake and Veil, 2021
Oil on linen
220 x 150 cm
Thomias Radin
A.S.A.P (always strive and prosper), 2022
Oil on linen
184 x 221 cm
PAULA TURMINA
Crocodile Dreamtime, 2021
Oil on linen
200 x 170 cm
SALLY JEROME
Community Outreach, 2020
Oil on canvas
66 x 81 cm
KOSHIRO AKIYAMA
Madness, 2021
Acrylic and ink on wood panel
30 × 40 cm
SALLY JEROME
Sculpture for the School Courtyard, 2020
Oil on canvas
66.04 x 81.28 cm
ALEX MCADOO
Brahmagupta and Fibonacci, 2021
Oil on linen
123 x 152 cm
ALEX MCADOO
Buck by Nooksack River, 2022
Oil on linen
76 x 91 cm
SANTIAGO MORA
Liminal, 2021
Acrylic on canvas
70 x 90cm
OTHIANA ROFFIEL
Así la cosa, 2021
Oil on canvas
120 x 90 cm
MARIJKE VASEY
Every Leaf is a Flower, 2022
Oil, acrylic and spray-paint on panel
28 x 35 cm
PAULA TURMINA
While I rest, 2021
Oil on canvas
80 x 50 cm
SEBASTIÁN HIDALGO
Sueños de Oruga, 2019
Oil on cotton
38 x 38 cm
Atticus Wakefield
Low Hanging Fruit, 2021
Oil on linen
102 x 127 cm
ALLAN VILLAVICENCIO
Frutiplanismo, 2022
Oil on linen
63 x 53 cm
MARIJKE VASEY
Untitled, 2021
Oil, acrylic and spray-paint on canvas
120 x 150 cm
SANTIAGO MORA
Liminal II, 2022
Acrylic on canvas
80 x 120 cm
ARIANE HUGHES
Out of Reach (Call Back Never), 2020
Oil on linen
50 x 40 cm