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CHRIS KENNY + GEORGIA RUSSELL + JASON WALLIS-JOHNSON re:formed 6 October—17 November 2007 Three artists represented by England & Co exhibit together

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| Chris Kenny’s
map works use the colours of his materials in an almost painterly way.
His landmarks float and interact in unlikely combinations that ricochet
back and forth between disparate locations and associations. The motifs
of roads, parks, football pitches, dual carriageways, car parks, routes
and places are cut from maps from around the world. They are
re-arranged in new three-dimensional configurations and chart the very
nature of place itself. These works together with his text
constructions – all of them geometrical and abstract – have some
affinity with the pure and clear world of early Modernism. Artist's page >
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| Georgia Russell
utilises the potential of her found materials when she manipulates,
cuts and transforms books, music scores, newspapers, maps and
photographs. She has always chosen material which ‘holds within it a
sense of its own history’ and intervenes with her chosen objects in
order to resurrect them. Even as she strives to retain and reclaim the
past, her techniques attack it and so a sense of loss and preservation
becomes part of each work. Her chosen materials are
transformed, sometimes with flamboyant colour and wild cutting,
sometimes with discreet play on the subject or title of her printed
ephemera. Russell’s cut-out traceries hover between object and image. Artist's page >
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| Jason Wallis-Johnson ’s new works include his large-scale figures Camouflaged Christ and Queen of the Universe, iconic images rendered strangely surreal with their marbleised silicone surfaces. The smaller silicone figures in the exhibition emerge
from found figurines, sometimes with pieces of their former porcelain
selves still attached. Now abstracted, they bear traces of their
‘human’ beginnings. Also included are Lightboxes
from his series of illuminated maps with pierced surfaces that shimmer
against the light. His meticulous carbon drawings use manual
techniques to produce what seem to be mechanically-made designs on
paper. Artist's page > |
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