Landlines: Explorations of Art, Landscape and the Environment
Delightful exhibition at the Royal Geographical Society of work by members of the
Wilderness Art Collective, 15 contemporary artists working on or with
landscape.
There was a great
variety of work in this small show cleverly arranged and hung to make it feel
more spacious and to give each artist their own space. The works did make me
think about landscape and the environment in quite a visceral way.
Shown here is an
installation by Louise Ann Wilson originally for Dorothy Wordsworth’s bedroom
at Royal Mount which felt like an intellectual Tracey Emin “Bed”. It shows how Dorothy used memory to transport
herself into the landscape from her bed.
I liked Brian
Thompson’s small stratified sculptures of rivers and mountains and Peter Geraerts stunning Arctic and
Antarctic photographs with a hyperreal feel to them in their clarity. I had a
fascination conversation at the end with Catalina Christensen who had a display
of metal and earth pigments she had collected in Columbia. It was a lovely
array of subtle colours and she explained how she didn’t sell them but swapped
with other collectors.
Closed 14
September 2019 but on show at Morden Hall Park in South London until 12 October,
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