Past
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Surrealism and Witchcraft
Alma Berrow, Bea Bonafini, Leonora Carrington, Harriet Gillett, Ariane Hughes, Tali Lennox, Paula Rego, Nooka Shepherd, Paula Turmina, Sophie von Hellermann and Georg Wilson 17 Nov - 20 Dec 2023 LAMB Participating artists: Alma Berrow, Bea Bonafini, Leonora Carrington, Harriet Gillett, Ariane Hughes, Tali Lennox, Paula Rego, Nooka Shepherd, Paula Turmina, Sophie von Hellermann and Georg Wilson. LAMB Gallery is pleased to announce its upcoming exhibition Surrealism and Witchcraft. Running from 16 November - 20 December 2023, the group exhibition investigates... Read more -
Magnetic Midnight Maison
A Personal Anthology of Colombian Craft by Lucía Echavarría 16 Nov 2023 - 5 Sep 2024 32 St George Lucia Echavarria’s Magnetic Midnight Maison is a collection of over 120 one-of-kind, handmade pieces, which culminates 3 years of research by the designer into traditional Colombian craft aesthetics and techniques, showcasing the work of over 80 artisans across 10 regions in Colombia who specialise in more than 12 distinct crafting... Read more -
Alma Berrow: Echo
5 - 28 Oct 2023 LAMB LAMB Gallery is pleased to present ‘Echo’, a new installation of ceramic work by British artist Alma Berrow opening 5th October 2023.
With playfulness and humour at the heart of her practice, Berrow’s meticulously hand-moulded ceramic objects transport us to moments of nostalgic familiarity, creating vignettes inspired by everyday life, human interaction, and shared experience. Growing up in a one-bathroom cottage with her mother and two sisters, the shared bathroom was always full of life, a place for daydream and wild imagination: from elaborate gowns made from towels and deep-sea diving in the bath, to mimicking the daily rituals of older siblings or parents.
At first glance, Berrow’s new work appears to be a functional, run-of-the-mill bathroom installed within the gallery space. Viewers are invited to physically step into the work, and on closer inspection, minute details are revealed to suggest that the room has been recently inhabited. Ceramic toothbrushes, open pill boxes, towers of empty loo roll, a pile of dirty mags and pube-covered soap, half-smoked cigarettes in ashtrays, and an abandoned backgammon reanimate the seemingly static space. Berrow reminds us that the bathroom is a space where the unimaginable becomes possible, adorning an uncanny bathtub with large surrealist-like hands, taps shaped like noses and a plughole disguised as a mouth. These ornate bathroom fixtures give the impression of nymphs caught mid-play, evoking notions of escapism, joy and coming of age. As Berrow elaborates:
“I use a lot of my own memories in my work, so many of the objects are odes to my own upbringing. What I wanted to do with this installation is capture what this very intimate, usually shared space means to the many. From watching a parent shave and mimicking them to becoming an adult and shaving, hiding at parties, standing naked in front of the mirror, sneaking cigarettes out the window, the loo that doesn’t flush, your first period...there is something very vulnerable about a bathroom. The bathroom is very clean and unaged, with black and white checked floor, I want to make it as ubiquitous as possible. It’s a playground of action and nostalgia, dark and light. Hopefully something for everyone to relate to, shock or giggle at.”
Often inspired by intimate day-to-day experiences from her formative years, Berrow’s nostalgic and sometimes uncanny artistic vocabulary is inextricably linked to personal memory. From an intimate standpoint, she explores the aesthetics of the surreal through the reconstruction of her family bathroom combining ready-made objects with her highly detailed ceramic works, which she refers to as ‘fake-real’ objects. This installation encompasses Berrow’s ability to transform ordinary objects into art pieces that are both humorous and other-worldly beautiful, inviting us to revisit our own memories through these site-specific, ceramic pieces. Read more -
Whispers from the South
Luísa Brandelli, Talles Lopes, Heloisa Hariadne, Pedro Neves, Noara Quintana, Joelington Rios, Ayla Tavares and Hal Wildson. 5 Oct - 5 Nov 2023 LAMB LAMB Gallery is pleased to present “Whispers from the South”, a group exhibition in collaboration with Instituto Inclusartiz, curated by Lucas Albuquerque. The exhibition aims to explore how contemporary Brazilian artists rethink visual culture through a critical examination of their own history and confront the notion of subalternity.
“Whispers from the South”, presents a cross-section of contemporary Brazilian art production, bringing together eight artists from different regions of Brazil. The artists in the show all share a common dialogue that challenges the cultural complexity which moulds the country. Driven by their common desire of cultural identity investigation, the selected artists question the historical setbacks embedded in Brazilian history through the mediums of painting, drawing, photography, embroidery, and sculpture. Their poetic gestures poignantly illustrate how reverberations from the past influence the present and illuminate new challenges in South America.
Ayla Tavares’s practice (Rio de Janeiro) explores the intricate relationship between craftsmanship and the layers of time it evokes. By the use of clay and coal, Tavares investigates archaeological artefacts, architecture and objects we handle on a daily basis to think about memory and common life. In her drawing practice, she covers the entire canvas with patterns resembling land and sea, emphasising their archaeological connection with ceramics. Earthenware has been repeatedly discovered on archaeological expeditions throughout history; thus, the artist delves into the notion of ceramics as the “eternal object.”
Interested in the traces of colonisation in the Brazilian Amazon, Noara Quintana (Florianópolis) engages with the lingering influence of European decorative arts that were widely imported to the North of Brazil during the early 19th century. She reimagines these contradictions through a tropical Belle Époque, aiming to destabilise a colonial legacy through an affirmative and diverse portrayal of Amazonian botany. In her series “Serpentine Traces,” the artist subverts the wallpapers and ironwork made popular in the arts and crafts movement with a tropical imaginary, seeking narratives that call into question the connections between Britain and the Amazon at the end of the Victorian period.
Luisa Brandelli (Porto Alegre) also appreciates the influence of decorativeness in her work. However, her practice develops with a more abstract aesthetic. The artist frequently utilises commonplace materials such as fabric, cloth, yarn, sequins, and beads to craft substantial objects in a pictorial way. By employing sewing techniques often associated with the “feminine,” Brandelli challenges traditional gender roles in art production. She explores the dichotomy between “high” art and craftsmanship, and the distinction between valuable and ordinary materials.
Talles Lopes’ (Goiás) work focuses on the dynamics of subservience and exploitation from a geopolitical perspective. He employs infographics typically used in geographical surveys as tools to expose the nation’s history of exploitation. In his piece titled “Universal Language for Local Erasures,” the artist superimposes four different maps originally produced by the Brazilian geographic and statistical institution, IBGE, during the tenure of the 21st president, Juscelino Kubitschek (1956 - 1961). This map provides a window into the ongoing disparities resulting from political and economic developmentalism projects that continue to leave their mark on the country even today.
Hal Wildson (Goiás), also born in Brazil’s central-west region, advocates for a rebellious movement that reclaims national symbols, which the extreme right-wing has appropriated in recent years. This movement aims to envision a “Re-Utopya” project, emphasising the integration of ancestral knowledge and caring practices. In his latest series, the artist employs well-known books from the 1950s to 1980s that discuss utopia, Brazilian identity, and the nation’s development. Through this, he reconstructs new interpretations of the past, envisioning it as fertile ground for shaping a better future.
In northeastern Brazil, Pedro Neves (Maranhão) engages in a pictorial exploration where abstraction and figuration blend into a symbolic realm. In this sphere, the body, everyday objects, botanical life, and clothing immerse the viewer in the richness of Afro-Brazilian cultural practices. The presented painting is part of an ongoing series in which the artist paints his mother’s dreams. Untitled refers to a dream in which two women talk about her son (the artist). In the work, Neves tenderly represents himself as a potted plant, following the oneiric image described by his mother.
Similarly, focusing on ancestry, Heloisa Hariadne’s practice is characterised by vibrant colours that beckon the viewer into an introspective journey surrounded by elements from nature like botanical life and wild animals. Her works seek to intertwine painting and poetry, crafting a composition that reflects the aspirations of a new generation in Brazil. By merging different natural objects into fluid forms, Hariadne creates a
soft and intimate portrait where her continuous inner investigation becomes the ground where she moves between the abstract and the
figurative.
By presenting the human body within a politically fragile context, Joellington Rios, a native of a quilombo community in Maranhão, utilises photography to envision new frameworks for the black body. This involves portraying it beyond a punitive condition, showcasing its glory and strength. In the series “What Sustains Rio,” individuals from marginalised communities are depicted as the foundation of the entire state, simultaneously representing the central image of a postcard that transcends time and space.
In featuring these eight artists, all supported by the non-profit organisation Instituto Inclusartiz, “Whispers from the South” discusses Brazil’s colonial past and reimagines the present, highlighting local cultures and their ties to the global South. Each of these works echoes political and aesthetic discussions from a country located 9,000 km away, hinting at an ongoing revolution within the realm of visual arts—acting as seismographs of their time and heralding turmoil ahead.
Lucas Albuquerque. Read more -
Merve İşeri: Passage
7 - 30 Sep 2023 LAMB LAMB Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition of new work by Merve İşeri. In this body of work the artist's process begins by putting small circular stickers on the canvas to mark points of the star constellations; in this exhibition they are, aries, taurus and ursa minor. The... Read more -
Pippa El-Kadhi Brown: VISTA
7 - 30 Sep 2023 LAMB LAMB Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition of new work by Pippa El-Kadhi Brown. In this new body of work, the artist takes us through veiled passageways between sun, moon and sky. A glass frame between home and universe. Exploring ethereal moments in the spaces in-between, Pippa El-Kadhi... Read more -
Banana Branches
Mahesh Baliga, Alma Berrow, Mark Corfield-Moore, Tonico Lemos Auad, Natalia LL, Theo Mercier, Tiago Mestre, Paulo Nazareth, Marius Steiger, Tiago Tebet 17 Jun - 28 Jul 2023 LAMB Read more -
Sun, Sun, Sun! by Tiago Mestre
26 Apr - 4 Jun 2023 LAMB LAMB Gallery is pleased to present the second solo UK exhibition by Portuguese artist Tiago Mestre. The exhibition is comprised of ten new oil on canvas paintings exploring the rich pictorial associations of the Sun throughout human history. Read more -
Still Life / Still Living
Group exhibition featuring: Pippa El-Kadhi Brown, Alma Berrow, Clara Hastrup, Marina Woisky, Maria Livman, Bruno Moutinho, Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato, Anderson Borba, Alexandre da Cunha, Fernando Marques Penteado and Tiago Mestre. 25 Mar - 1 Apr 2023 LAMB LAMB Gallery and PALMA are pleased to present "Still Life/Still Living," an exhibition that invites viewers to witness an unconventional gathering of sculptures seated around a table, as if they were dinner guests.
The sculptures on display have been created by various artists from diverse cultural and aesthetic backgrounds, yet they share a common space in the exhibition, engaging in unexpected and intriguing conversations. Each piece is carefully placed around or near the table to create a harmonious yet unpredictable arrangement, much like the interactions between real-life dinner guests.
By creating this dynamic living environment, the exhibition explores the concept of still life in contemporary art, pushing beyond our traditional perceptions of the genre, which typically feature inanimate objects arranged in a static composition.
Featuring emerging artists Pippa El-Kadhi Brown (b. 1996), Alma Berrow (b.1992) Clara Hastrup (b.1990), Marina Woisky (b. 1997), Maria Livman and Bruno Moutinho as well as established artists Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato (1900 - 1995), Anderson Borba (b. 1972), Alexandre da Cunha, (b. 1969) Fernando Marques Penteado (b. 1955) and Tiago Mestre (b. 1975), the exhibition reflects LAMB Gallery’s ethos to encourage and develop curatorial dialogues between multi-generational artists from Latin America and Britain. Read more -
Continuities
2000 Years of Textiles in Latin America 16 Mar - 22 Apr 2023 LAMB Lamb Gallery & Paul Hughes are delighted to present 'Continuities' a group exhibition spanning 2000 years of textiles in Latin America. Considered the first art form in the Andean region, textiles were vessels to convey identity and became paramount in reflecting social, occupational, and political status. Andean textiles encompassed not... Read more -
Organic Behaviours by Clara Hastrup
26 Jan - 10 Mar 2023 LAMB Lamb Gallery is pleased to present Clara Hastrup’s solo exhibition Organic Behaviour . Through a humorous standpoint and using the absurd as her visual language, Hastrup’s practice revolves around the ever-changing relationship between society and objects of consumption. Inspired by the Fibonacci sequence, Hastrup has developed Prickly Tunes , an... Read more -
Shaping Modernism: Brazilian Design Icons
10 Sep 2022 - 6 Mar 2023 32 St George As the first official display in the Mayfair location, from 2022-2023, 32 St George presented a display of works Brazilian modernist designers, including iconic names such as Jorge Zalzsupin, Oscar Niemeyer and Martin Eisler. Read more