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Matthew Smith ‘The making of the
landscape’ is Smith’s first solo exhibition at Vane,
consisting of drawn, photographic and painted works produced over the last
decade.
Smith’s projects in
sculpture, drawing, photography and video share a concern with fictionalised
and idealised representations of nature and of place, rejecting the idea of one
all-encompassing original ‘nature’ in favour of infinite interpretations,
copies and inventions of the natural. He takes as subject matter the utopian
pastoral scenes of advertising, food packaging, maps, postcards, tourist
brochures or the disjunctions that often exist between the images of billboard
advertising and the locations of those billboards. Smith explores, reveals and
navigates a way through these myriad natures.
The
ongoing Junction
series depicts the length of the M1 motorway, with each work representing one
junction. The project uses the M1 motorway as a device for viewing the
landscape of England with the landscape becoming an event in automotive space.
A series of journeys were undertaken and black and white photographs taken of
the signage along the roadside which were then hand coloured using inks.
Referencing early Victorian postcards, the unreal feel of the hand coloured
images reflects the hyper-real motorway environment. The works use the
antiquated conventions of the tourist postcard – a memento of a particular
place – to depict the generic environment of the motorway. With the focus on
the signage, the image of the sign for a place is made to stand in for the
actual experience of the place.
Corporate
landscape is
made up from corporate logos depicting snow-capped mountains. Images of the
natural landscape are endlessly deployed in order to sell us all manner of
products from motor vehicles to cheese. These images are used to connote
ruggedness, naturalness and permanence, for beverage companies, banks, clothing
brands, financial service providers, and multinational entertainment companies.
The drawing links together the individual logos to create a graphic mountain
range or horizon line, a faked topography that rises and falls creating its own
peaks, ravines and valleys. The rising and falling line of the horizon is
reminiscent of a graph used to plot the financial progress of a business or the
stock markets, thus forming a picture of the corporate landscape.
The
series of Untitled
drawings use the convention of the contour line from map-making to create an
imaginary landscape. Drawn by hand these landscapes develop organically
continuing from one sheet in the series to the next. The drawings mimic the
techniques of the map, our traditional means of navigation and orientation, yet
their form is used to negate the very purpose of the medium.
Smith’s Ectopia drawings re-configure the coastline of England to
form a new uncanny island, one that is both strange and familiar.
Metamorphosing the familiar shape of England into an unsettling and ambiguous
form, the viewer engages with the pieces through the act of recognition, as
familiar fragments of coastline come into focus. In turn, this recognition
process is undermined by sections that resist identification.
The two
British Wildlife
drawings appear similar to museum dioramas: they catalogue the different
species of mammals resident in the British Isles, using the convention of the
silhouette found in wildlife identification books. The animals are arranged
along the derelict remnants of a dry-stone wall and set against an indistinct
murky backdrop that suggests something just out of sight over the horizon
lending the works a sinister and disturbing atmosphere.
The uniformity of the creatures’ rendering makes no distinction between the
‘common’ and ‘endangered’.
Smith questions
how such images inform our experience of the natural world and how these
manipulated representations become part of our understanding of the reality
around us. He reveals our belief in nature as
something seemingly more authentic and more ‘real’ than our man-made, urban
environment to be a nostalgic hankering after some imaginary idealised past way
of living. |
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