private viewing : 7pm Friday 13th October
open to the public:
9am – 6pm Saturday 14th October until Thursday 19th October.
9am – 6pm Saturday 14th October until Thursday 19th October.
A collection of artworks exploring esoteric notions of faith and ritual: spiritual, institutional and social. From the treasured to the discarded, the sacred to the profane, the celebrated to the unjust, these are the intricate details both glimpsed and eclipsed by the expanse of modern life.
About the artists:
Miss Hilton Ink
Miss Hilton Ink’s work covers many media including collage, assemblage, oil and acrylic paintings, as well as sculptural ‘altered’ artworks. Themes within the work explore ritual, gender and beauty of impermanence. A fascination in our sense of identity and ‘humanness’, results in a wide variety of pieces with an emphasis on reused and recycled materials. Any natural materials used in the work are salvaged and ethically sourced.
Miss Hilton Ink’s work covers many media including collage, assemblage, oil and acrylic paintings, as well as sculptural ‘altered’ artworks. Themes within the work explore ritual, gender and beauty of impermanence. A fascination in our sense of identity and ‘humanness’, results in a wide variety of pieces with an emphasis on reused and recycled materials. Any natural materials used in the work are salvaged and ethically sourced.
Stuart Hermolle
Hermolle’s pen and ink drawings of tangled, overgrown places are the exploration of the liminal, haunted spaces of the everyday. Drawing influences from Symbolism, Occultism, the Pre-Raphaelites, old ghost stories, and Psychogeography, these drawings attempt to re-enchant the mundane landscapes with a sense of the uncanny, – the possibility of a haunting just sideways of the places we walk through everyday.
Hermolle’s pen and ink drawings of tangled, overgrown places are the exploration of the liminal, haunted spaces of the everyday. Drawing influences from Symbolism, Occultism, the Pre-Raphaelites, old ghost stories, and Psychogeography, these drawings attempt to re-enchant the mundane landscapes with a sense of the uncanny, – the possibility of a haunting just sideways of the places we walk through everyday.
Antidote
Antidote creates multimedia artworks with an emphasis on Socio-political commentary, subculture, nostalgia and plenty of dark humour.
Antidote creates multimedia artworks with an emphasis on Socio-political commentary, subculture, nostalgia and plenty of dark humour.
The private viewing will take place from 7pm Friday 13th October at The Artery Gallery.
The exhibition will be open to the public 9am – 6pm Saturday 14th October until Thursday 19th October.