Opening hours
Wed-Fri 1-5pm, Sat 11am-3pm
Mid- project opening
Thursday, 07 February, 6-9pm
The Past is Ongoing
Angela Darby, Robert Peters
Ends 16 February 2013
Angela Darby and Robert Peters are
interested in all sorts of mementos, memorabilia and souvenirs, large
or small scale, hidden or plain open. Like cultural anthropologists they
collect, photograph and archive signs of personal expression made
public and expose a creativity which is commonly undervalued.
Darby /Peters’ practice offers an opportunity to reflect on the nature
of the collaborative process. The two individuals have collaborated over
a number of years in a range of media. The Past is Ongoing explores the
nature of their joint practice in a manner that suggests both symbiosis
and division. All images have been captured in urban settings and
feature elements from previous projects.
Public Address presents an ongoing documentative process, recording non
commodified rituals. For this exhibition, examples of these unsanctioned
public interventions at one bridge are presented in a new configuration
spanning the slippage of time.
Private Lives in Public Spaces is a series of new works that combine a
meme in which padlocks emblazoned with lovers' names are attached to
bridges with an investigation of bridges that are notorious suicide
spots.
The video works I ain’t no kinda hustler and the intangible are observed
street scenes that infer the brain's need to layer meaning onto random
experiences.
‘I ain’t no kinda hustler’.
This title is taken from a line spoken by Joe Buck as he tosses his
clothes into a city trashcan. The scene from the movie ‘Midnight Cowboy’
(1969) directed by John Schlesinger marks an epiphany for the character
as he moves from a grimy existence in New York City to Miami hoping
that the change of climate will cure his dying friend Ritzo Ratso. The
soundtrack is sampled from the original movie score by John Barry and it
is played backwards. The two rubbish bags in this film echo the
relationship of the film's protagonists, subject to harsh influences
beyond their control. As externalised receptacles of the passing
consumer's litter, the bags also seem to be humanized in a desperate
attempt to escape their confinement. Each element takes that which is
familiar and transforms it into the unfamiliar.
The image ‘I ain’t no kinda hustler’ was captured within an urban
setting and is displayed in a manner that connects a documented street
scene contained within the gallery outward to the public domain. The
dual projection is sequentially manipulated to infer divergence of
approach.
Alongside their visual practice Angela Darby is a critical writer for
Aesthetica The Art & Culture Publication and WhiteHot Magazine
(NYC).
Robert Peters was a founding director of Catalyst Arts and is presently
the Director of Seacourt Print Workshop based at The Centre for Fine Art
Printmaking in Bangor Co. Down.
Image: A.Darby&R.Peters.
Image; Darby & Peters
Private Lives in Public Spaces
A Valentine's action
14 February 2013, 6pm, starts at PS²
Duration: One hour, free event
Destination: Weir Bridge
A Bridge is a structure which connects two places divided by and obstacle, like a river, a valley or a road. It floats more or less elegant in the air, off the solid ground, in-between, not here, not there. This serves of course as an obvious metaphor of passageways, of state of minds, politics and-of yearning lovers. You are here, I am there, let’s bridge the gap and? Kiss? Perhaps.
But this walk and action for Valentine Lovers enacts a ritual common in many cities: two people give testimony of their love by adding a lock to the railings of a bridge. With the initials of their names scribbled on the metal, with the turn of the key thrown in the water they confess eternal... Oh stop it. Or start it. Artists Angela Darby and Robert Peters lead the Valentine’s tour to a nearby bridge. Bring a partner (if you can, not provided) and a lock (if you can, yet provided)and express your Private Lives in Public Spaces.
To see how this action took off see