PAST EXHIBITION

5 – 19 October 2023

Freddie Foulkes and HM Electric present Pleasure, a two-week-long exhibition of photography, painting, and sculpture by seven London-based artists: Lou Melchior, Chris Moon, Mia Casati, Anna Kowalski, Eva Dixon, Nick Aliberti, and William Van Hoorn, opening on Thursday 5th October 2023.

Born out of the work of Danish photographer Lou Melchior (b. 1973), Pleasure is a show of work concerned with the nuance of mundaneness. Melchior’s very particular practice is centred around what would, without her having photographed it, be deemed banal or insignificant. Creatively composed and exceedingly carefully captured photographs of anything and everything from rubbish to road-markings and car doors to carpeted floors are Melchior’s speciality. Something of the everyday that somehow or other manages to pass many of us by is something that Melchior so nobly aggrandises. She says: ‘The notion of recognisable nothingness as subject matter is something I keep returning to.’ And nothing can be more recognisable and yet simultaneously so nothing(-y) than the subject matter at the core of each of the three photographs she is exhibiting in Pleasure: the ephemeral nature of natural light.

These three photographs have been presented to Moon, Casati, Kowalski, Dixon, Aliberti, and Van Hoorn, in the hope that, by using their specially trained eyes and remarkable ability to communicate what they see and feel, they will empathise with Melchior’s distinctly detailed approach to recording lived experience. Whatever it may be in Melchior’s photographs that has captured each of these artist’s minds, what is truthfully the subject of these interactions is the age-old and boundary-blurring relationship between what are commonly perceived to be disparate disciplines: photography has long-played a fundamental role in painting and sculpture. Common knowledge ascribes the origin of this interdisciplinary relationship to the work of Eadweard Muybridge (1830 – 1904), who, in the 1870s, pioneered a form of photography whereby high-speed movement could be recorded in such detail as it was not by the human eye. It was with gratitude and awe that artists as canonical as Marcel Duchamp, Francis Bacon, and Sol LeWitt looked at these early photographs. However, painters as far back as the seventeenth century, if not further, used the camera obscura (a combination of lenses and mirrors) to observe, seeking above all else nuanced gradations of light that it is tricky for the eye alone to at once observe, recognise, and record.

Nowadays, the role photography plays in the making of painting is such common practice. However, to exhibit the two together, the photograph and its derivative painting or sculpture, is not. Presenting an exceedingly rare opportunity to see their most recent work exhibited alongside their inspiration, Pleasure acts a guide, leading the viewer into the artists’ minds. One ultimately discovers just what it is that this fantastic roster of almost violently individual artists sees in Melchior’s (and my and your) everyday.

Exhibition text by Freddie Foulkes.

LOU MELCHIOR

Lou Melchior
Fourteen twenty-six
2022
25 x 37.5cm
An edition of 10 photographs

Lou Melchior
Eleven thirty-seven
2021
68 x 45.3cm
An edition of 10 photographs

Lou Melchior
Zero six zero eight
2022
40 x 60cm
An edition of 10 photographs

Lou Melchior (b. 1973) is a photographer concerned with ephemerality. Her subject matter, whether it be ‘rubbish’, road-markings, or light itself (as it often is), is, without her having photographed it, overlooked by many if not most. Melchior steals time with her camera; she preserves it. Eager to frame the world around her, she has here presented three photographs, Zero six zero eight, Fourteen twenty-six, Eleven thirty-seven, each concerned with the effect of natural light, reflections, and layers.

Prints from Lou Melchior are available
here.

EVA DIXON

Eva Dixon
The Wash
2023
148 x 148cm
Mixed media textile painting

Eva Dixon
Tough Luck
2023
30.5 x 36cm
Mixed media textile painting

Eva Dixon (b. 2000) has found her mode of communication working with textiles. Having recently graduated from Central St. Martins, where she studied Fine Art, Dixon’s practice is centred around her interest in construction. The aesthetics of liminality, of spaces in the making, have had a profound impact on her work: not only are hazard-warning colours set against muted and earthy tones, but so too are voids juxtaposed with substance, works hung on pullies, and technical fabrics used in abundance. For her two works The Wash and Tough Luck, Dixon has looked to Melchior’s Eleven thirty-seven.

WILLIAM VAN HOORN

William Van Hoorn
Heaven & Hell
2023
76 x 51cm
Oil on canvas

William Van Hoorn (b. 2000) is a painter whose often varied manipulation of his medium results in consistently rich and strong works. Like many great and good paintings, Van Hoorn’s address themselves as paintings and the depth of emotion and aesthetic-concern that necessitates the making of them. Accomplished at attaining effect with both oil paint and card collage, Van Hoorn is presently combining the severe aesthetic of collage with a comparative looseness of painting. With nuances of tone and texture of paramount importance, Van Hoorn has here worked from Melchior’s Zero six zero eight.

MIA CASATI

Mia Casati
Cielo
2023
100 x 138cm
Oil on canvas

Mia Casati
Chemtrails
2023
10 x 15cm
Oil on canvas

Mia Casati (b. 2001) is a painter of the utmost sensitivity. For Casati, painting is a process of tapping into one’s own psyche, a process of cultivating a relationship with one’s own emotions. It is a process akin to the process of living: one of trials and tribulations fraught with confusion and contestation. The painting is born out of this process, delicate and intense. For her works Cielo and Chemtrails, Casati has here worked from Melchior’s Zero six zero eight, confirming the layers to be of interest.

NICK ALIBERTI

Nick Aliberti
Blue L Plate 1
2023
15.7cm (w) x 20cm (h) x 10.2cm (d)
Pigment on salvaged metal

Nick Aliberti
Blue L Plate 2
2023
15.5cm (w) x 20cm (h) x 10.2cm (d)
Pigment on salvaged metal

Nick Aliberti (b. 2000) is a sculptor who works with various materials, most of which have been discarded. He offers each of us a subtle approach to life; an approach that recognises the nuanced beauty in the otherwise overlooked. Aliberti recently graduated from The Slade School of Fine Art and maintains that process is at the heart of his practice. Materials are collected, cut, burnt, scored, oxidised, and ultimately assembled. The process of viewing thus encourages attention to detail; the work is intricately rhythmic and commands its presence. For his two sculptures Aliberti has here worked from Melchior’s Zero six zero eight.

ANNA KOWALSKI

Anna Kowalski
Aimerons Nous
2023
90 x 50cm
Oil on canvas

Anna Kowalski (b. 2001) is a painter in whose practice the photograph, and its ability to distil time, currently plays a fundamental role. Kowalski, who recently graduated from Chelsea College of Arts, constantly revolves around the theme of time; how the past influences the present and how nostalgia warps memory. Kowalski’s interests are in aggrandising fleeting or ordinarily forgotten moments through the more time-consuming process of painting. Kowalski has here worked from Melchior’s Eleven thirty-seven.

CHRIS MOON

Chris Moon
Reverse Summer Scene
2023
60 x 77cm
Oil and acrylic on canvas

Chris Moon (b. 1976) is a nervous painter, although not in the neurotic sense; Moon, experienced in the practice of making images using oil and acrylic, is sensitive to his surroundings. It is the grey area between completion/perfection and destruction that excites him most. His most recent work suggests a looseness not before so prevalent in his oeuvre. The ‘image’ is important to Moon, but the painting has become more so. He has here worked from Melchior’s Fourteen twenty-six.

To make an enquiry about any of the works exhibited during Pleasure, please contact us here.