SELECTED WORKS BY Anna Barriball
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Anna Barriball
Black Wardrobe
2003
tape on wardrobe
177.8 x 70 x 40 |
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Black Wardrobe is a bureau wrapped seamlessly in tape, pressed with obsessive determination to form a second skin revealing the dresser's most enigmatic crevasses. Suffocated in black, the cupboard looses its recognisable physicality, becoming a monumental void connoting absence and memory. Through prolonged physical connection with the object, Barriball unveils a mystery in the too-familiar: a synesthesia of sight and touch, where senses merge and become heightened in an elevated pursuit of beauty. |
Anna Barriball
Door
2004
pencil on paper
208.5 x 88 x 6 |
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Anna Barriball's works convey an intimacy with the overly familiar. Her everyday objects are 'gagged' by smothering surfaces, becoming seductively sinister husks of their former selves. Made by placing a large piece of paper over a door, and rubbing it with a pencil, Door is a drawing that assumes the qualities of a sculpture. Its metallic, burnished surface captures every subtle detail of the original object, while the paper warps and fluxes through repetitive handling to gain a solidity of its own. Central to Barriball’s practice is the time and effort involved in the making; her process formulates as poetic meditation, finding a delicate fascination in the mundane and overlooked. |
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ARTIST INFORMATION
ARTICLES
ANNA BARRIBALL
Firth Street Gallery
Anna Barriball's work hinges on minimal interactions with objects and often steps between the parallel languages of drawing and sculpture. Many of the pieces in this exhibition take the form of found objects, which the artist has subjected to sometimes subtle, sometimes not-so-subtle transformations.
Much of Barriball's practice explores and depicts the accretion of time - from the length of time it takes for a candle to burn down, to the repetitive activity of taking graphite rubbings from objects that bare the traces of their use or function. Everyday items acquire new and startling properties - a map of the world is transformed into a strange expanse of shimmering substance, or the bounce of a rubber ball on a piece of paper creates the effect of a cosmic explosion. Her interventions produce objects that combine a minimalistic rigour and the seemingly endless endeavour to make sense of the world of objects by empirical study.
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Source: www.likeyou.com
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