Current Exhibition
30.01 - 18.02.2025
Gianna T & Vincent Matuschka
Curated by Kit Gurnos
Past Exhibitions
Between Lanes
DOBRA*
Sergio Camargo
Lygia Clark
Willys de Castro
Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato
Mira Schendel
Tunga
Lina Bo Bardi
Oscar Niemeyer
Abraham Palatnik
Joaquim Tenreiro
Jorge Zalszupin
Curated by Mateus Nunes
11.10 - 20.12.2024
Wild Trumpets is delighted to collaborate with Dobra Gallery to present Between lanes, Dobra’s inaugural show in London. The exhibition showcases works by Sergio Camargo, Lygia Clark, Willys de Castro, Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato, Mira Schendel, and Tunga, with furniture design pieces by Lina Bo Bardi, Oscar Niemeyer, Abraham Palatnik, Sergio Rodrigues, Joaquim Tenreiro, Jorge Zalszupin, and José Zanine Caldas.
Widening the rhizomatic dynamics that constructed a plural yet coherent Brazilian modern visuality, the group show of historical works attests to the foundations, reoperations, and receptions of the late 1940s to the early 1990s in the continental country. The attentive amalgamation of local materials — such as jacarandá and pau-marfim in furniture — and images — like the sinuous landscape of central Brazil, the protagonism of neo-concretist ideas, and the effervescent role of Latin American in a so-called marginal modernism — culminate in the ideological establishment of a sophisticated and highly versatile visual culture representative of a nation.
Between lanes depicts not only a motion of repertoires and legacies that inserted Brazil as a pivotal axis in a global circuit, nor strictly migration vectors by Brazilian globetrotter artists, architects, and designers, but a historiographical agitation that embraced some of these people in Europe at their most avid period of production — such as Lygia Clark and Tunga — or have now been carefully revisited with contemporary theoretical apparatus — such as Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato. The dialogue also represents the transdisciplinary movements in Brazil between art, design, and architecture, with the integration of their expressions in unique works that incorporate in furniture pieces tectonic concerns akin to architecture – as in Lina Bo Bardi’s and Oscar Niemeyer’s works – and visual arts – showcased through Abraham Palatnik’s furniture with painted glass.
Dobra is an itinerant Brazilian gallery of art and design founded in 2024, now based in London.For its first activation, Dobra occupies the Wild Trumpets space in Notting Hill, with an exhibition curated by the gallery in collaboration with Brazilian curator Mateus Nunes.
Wild Trumpets is a London-based community-centric art initiative as an artist-led gallery and project space founded in 2022, directed by the artist Mariana Mauricio. Fostering and sheltering free and collaborative workshops and exhibitions for people of all ages, its activities center on artistic dialogue, sustainability, and sharing.
Mateus Nunes (1997, Belém, Brazil) is a writer, curator, and researcher from the Brazilian Amazon, based in São Paulo. Nunes holds a PhD in Art History from the University of Lisbon and is a postdoctoral fellow on History of Art and Architecture at Universidade de São Paulo and the Getty Foundation. Having collaborated with galleries and museums worldwide, his writings are published in Artforum, ArtReview, Carla, Flash Art, Frieze, and Terremoto.
Music of the Wild Earth
Georgia Beaumont
Kate Braine
Bella Easton
Ellie Lonsdale
Angela Mullen-Bryan
Felicity Warbrick
Wai Wong
19.09 - 24.06.2024
GIRLS + BOYS
Ile Sartuzi
Maomi Meindl
23.02.-23.03.2024
“Gossips” is a performance that was created by Ilê Sartuzi and Maomi Meindl having in consideration the context of the Wild Trumpets. During the opening of the exhibition, a group of children spread rumours to the guests. The gossip should generally be directed towards the artists or the exhibition and their working condition. The number of children is dependent on how large the space is. It shouldn’t be too saturated. The children should take turns picking random guests to tell them a secret, making them lean towards them so they can whisper in their ears. They can cover this act with their hand. The action can happen throughout the event in a slow and silent manner. The performance should leave no traces: it is a discreet, subtle, unostentatious action.
In the context of the “GIRLS AND BOYS” exhibition, the artist led a series of workshops with children that served as basis for the connection between the artists and the children but also material research for the project. The work explores the boundaries between fiction and reality by the spread of these rumours and also question socio-cultural conventions – and art events are a great context for that – with unfiltered truth that children can so easily convey.
FATA MORGANA
Thomas P. Grogan
Justine Melford-Colegate
Scott Young
Curated by Georgina Hill
18.11.-16.12.2023
‘A mirage consisting of multiple images, as of cliffs and buildings, that are distorted and magnified to resemble elaborate castles.’ The quivering, narrow band just above the horizon line, a superior mirage, given the Arthurian folkloric name Fata Morgana.
Within this optical phenomenon, the horizon, its objects and coastline are significantly compressed, doubled, stacked and inverted or elevated and the horizon and its distortions may appear to tremble. The phenomenon can be seen on land or at sea, in polar regions and in deserts, like those studied in Herzog’s 1971 film Fata Morgana.
The works consider horizon, mirage and illusion, whether literal or figurative, as prompts to which one may continuously seek to adapt to, toy with, marvel at, form a corresponding rhythm to or reject altogether. Images of bells pieced together from underneath, psychogeographical patterns of businessmen walking through Canary Wharf, the idle motion of bouncing on a trampoline, dipping under and above the horizon line.
Perhaps initially, the horizon is experienced as a point to look towards. In a moving body or environment, the ritual of forward facing may ground one into a sense of stability. Sunsets on postcards sent home from holidays, a vista, the view from a train window. Horizon may represent a pause. Conversely, a horizon can be experienced as a deception, the pause is therefore a placebo. It may pose as a complete image that presents itself as total or infinite – there is nothing beyond the horizon line because there is nothing visible beyond it. Like a trompe l'oeil, the horizon builds an illusion of ‘world’ and eventually, one becomes aware of its profundity, expanse or lack thereof. In turn, one questions the limitations of their position in relation to the horizon which they are facing.
As a part of their somatic poetry ritual titled Ignition Chronicles, poet CAConrad writes about the act of watching live webcams of the sun rising in Mecca, Tokyo, Istanbul and Prague from a rainy city in the United States. CAConrad considers the ritual of sunrise and sunset, the collective rhythm and movement pattern they can impose on a people.
Thomas P. Grogan’s Rites of Passage, may meditate on similar notions of movement patterns within urban and contemporary ecologies. Capturing footage from pavement level of businessmen commuting to office buildings in Canary Wharf, Grogan examines a nearly animal-like pattern that corporate and urban culture fosters. An intricate, three dimensional screen on legs displays the footage. Viewers peer downwards at the screen to watch the camera pointed upwards at the legs of commuters, reversing a typical sense of space while including us in a form of innocent eavesdropping. Notions of routine and universality are questioned; what does a collective movement pattern look like at this angle and within the boundaries of this screen?
Similarly, Justine Melford-Colegate’s photographic study Rhythmanalyst [Bells #4 and #7], encourages a reorientation. Documenting a 5 ton bell from below, Melford-Colegate resists a stillness and attempts to capture a layered history of material through piecing together. The bell, called Liberation is regarded as the oldest existing bell in Europe, residing within the Oudekerk, Amsterdam, nearly forgotten, hung in the dark and seldom rung. However, Melford-Colegate’s depictions of the still object feel far from still, a motion and rhythm expressed in the images and her position underneath them seem integral to a process of eroticising and re-seeing their layered history. An inability to capture the whole means the bell is shown fragmented, or in parts.
Grogan’s Ojo Rojo is a video work following the early making stages of a sculptural work. The video is reminiscent of a road movie, following the journey from the roads of the Spanish Basque Country to the coast of Galicia, emphasising scenes of motion and conceptions for the work in progress. Two protagonists discuss personal associations and connections to the horizon through the exercise. The sculpture aims to produce visual mirages by setting itself in a looping motion through different reflective surfaces, superposing these surfaces and objects onto the surrounding landscapes. The video considers the cyclicity of rituals that either ground or emancipate us and the role that the horizon may play in these rituals.
Scott Young's Trampoline with Vert de Mer features a small exercise trampoline hung to the wall with an intricate and dark marbleized effect on its surface. A trampoline, whether found in the backyard where children take turns bouncing or in a mundane suburban living room as the robotic audio of an exercise video plays, incites movement, engaged or languorous, jumping above and below the view of whatever horizon is available to view. A rigid marble effect underpinning the springy, playful and moving. The juxtaposition creates a tension, even an entrapment. The classical marbleized pattern pushes past functions of illusory persuasion and instead, through its particular juxtaposition, asks us to see twice.
Justine Melford-Colegate’s sculptural work Arcane Summit presents a reflective chair with a leg casting protruding through holes in its backrest and base. Like a phantom limb, the leg seems to be stepping into and through the chair, its origin unknown. Dressed in bulky pads and a pointy stiletto which gently rests on the floor. Its scale slightly dominates the chair, as it reflects and retracts the legs’ shadow on its surface. The chairs' affordance becomes a kind of portal. The inside of the leg, which one can peer into from the back of the chair, is lined with shimmering glass beads, resembling the compressed, material time of a geode or crystal.
Melford-Colegate considers symbolic material and the slippage, relation and association that accompany the leg, its protective padding and its sharp stiletto. The leg, slightly grotesque in its singularity and erotic in its fervour, displays a moment of disembodiment, entrapment and transition. A contiguity of meanings seem apparent through its juxtapositions, akin to the Surrealist tradition.
Both articles seek to enhance or obscure a part of the body; strengthening, softening, protecting, eroticising, bulking, elevating.
Svetlana Boym outlines two veins of nostalgia in her book The Future of Nostalgia. A restorative nostalgia and a reflective one. The restorative seems to fuel an illusion of home and origin, often through the reduction of symbols and histories to a single plot, advocating for the restoration of such origins. Boym connects this line of nostalgia to the extreme cases of contemporary nationalisms, which can be reflected in symbols as well as traditions of sport, patterns of movement and gender performance. Conversely, the reflective, perhaps a form of nostalgia more aligned with the artist's position, is to long for and consider the condition of longing, but to defer the homecoming, to look past restoration or solution.
Grogan, Young and Melford-Colegate dip in, over and under the lines created by their juxtapositions, contradictions and reorientations. The works are concerned more with a multiplicity in seeing, moving, materiality and histories, producing paradoxical tensions rather than memorials, reenactments or solutions.
Like the quivering distortions found in a horizon, a sunset on a postcard or a sunrise in a distant city watched from a computer screen, an inherent subjecthood is formed and therefore a gap between what we observe in the horizon and what that observation spurs within us.
Text by Claire Buchanan
THE EDGE OF THE WATER
Sebastián Espejo
28.10.-11.11.2023
Chilean born, London-based artist Sebastian Espejo, presents The Edge of the Water, his first UK show following his recent relocation to London.
Sebastian Espejo conveys a poetic language in the observation of light, colours and the everyday that have positioned him as one of the most talented up and coming artists in Chile. His meticulous and rigorous approach to the act of painting unfurls the relationship between painter and surroundings, which adapt according to its shifts. For this exhibition, we will have the privilege of seeing new works in this new environment, which will differ from his native Viña del Mar, a costal city in Chile. The exhibition will be accompanied with a text written by Philippa zu Knyphausen.
Sebastian Espejo (b. 1990) graduated from Universidad Católica in Chile. He has had exhibition recently in galleries in Santiago and Viña del Mar, such as Galería Animal, Oma, and piloto pardo.
INHERENT LANDSCAPE
Alice Quaresma
Ana Bial
Bianca Kann
Fernanda Feher
Francesca Wade
Goia Mujalli
Mariana Maurício
Curated by Thierry Freitas
12.10-14.10.2023
A geographic, yet also social construction, the landscape imposes itself upon every seeing being or one in motion. Our ability to imagine developed, possibly, from the perception of our surroundings: beyond contact with others, it was through knowing species and territories that we acquired the capacity to imagine so many more possible and impossible beings and places. Sensitivity distinguishes us, and while emotions are present in various other living beings, enchantment with beauty is uniquely ours. Capable of creation, we can invent other worlds, a fantasy born from signs captured here, in our earthly world.
This exhibition is constructed around three common ideas investigated by the artists Alice Quaresma, Ana Bial, Bianca Kann, Fernanda Feher, Francesca Wade, Goia Mujalli, and Mariana Mauricio: memory, landscape, and nature. There is also the coincidence - perhaps not so coincidental - that all reside outside their country of origin, from their "initial landscape."
In some works, there is a desire to record and interfere with images of the past, singling them out through artistic gesture. This is what Alice Quaresma does by delicately intervening in photographs of the landscape of Rio de Janeiro. While she creates a work that sits between the manual and the mechanical, the artist, in painting her images, imbues a sense of uniqueness to a support characterized by serialization. Quaresma's incisions reinforce the idea that every memory is also fiction. Ana Bial deliberately turns to the social construction of the fetish surrounding objects of attributed value: the painter presents some paintings made from shop windows where jewels are presented with pomp and circumstance. By interpreting them on canvas, Ana transforms the symbolic and monetary value of the objects into pure representation, no longer caring whether what we see are diamonds or ordinary stones. Working mainly with three-dimensional supports, Bianca Kann draws on both drawing and images from mass and popular culture to construct her sculptures. Her work is born in frank dialogue with the everyday world: it is a collection of ephemera in tune with the visual bombardment we experience. For the exhibition, the artist shows sculptures with elements of nature that reinforce the installative character that her work has been acquiring. Mariana Maurício has developed a practice that makes use of procedures such as the re-signification of common objects and the interpretation of images and memories of others. The artist is interested in understanding the operation of the ordinary in the artistic context and the reaction provoked by images when moved from their original context. Among the works in the show, Mariana brings a painting made from an event reported by the press, exploring the nuances contained in a gesture of transgression.
Some of the works are based on the idea of an "inner landscape", sometimes on the threshold between abstraction and figuration, and even in a fabulous and surrealist manner, as is the case with Fernanda Feher. An adept draftsman, Feher composes her drawings and paintings meticulously, presenting us with visual delusions full of details in which different temporalities and icons coexist in perfect harmony. Her pictorial practice is permeated by a notion of desire that reveals itself both in the narrative of her paintings and in the organic and sinuous forms she uses.
Francesca Wade's painting practice stands out for the harmony of elements and chromatic complexity. The artist creates colorful worlds that, despite having a direct influence from her artistic interaction with her daughter, do not sound childish. In Wade's apparent abstraction, the attentive observer will be able to capture various hints of a figuration with references to nature. Finally, Goia Mujalli presents a group of expressive paintings composed from complex images, sometimes captured from microscopic zooms on plant leaves and flower petals. Her painting manages to transform the uniqueness of the details into large settings, merging macro and micro and reminding us that nature operates in constant feedback.
In addition to a collection of memories and fictional constructions, the exhibition is a panorama of a recent generation of Brazilian artists - or with some relationship with Brazil - gathered for the first time in London. Together, these works form a unique horizon of colors, textures, and sensations, a visual delight formed by a landscape constructed by artistic gesture.
Thierry Freitas
AT THE DOOR OF THE HOUSE WHO WILL COME KNOCKING?
Giles Adamson Semple
Ignacio Gatica
Aitor González
Julie Koldby
Cosima zu Knyphausen
Paule Niedermayer
Giles Thackway
Gabriella Torres-Ferrer
15.09.- 07.10.2023
The group exhibition, curated and produced by Philippa zu Knyphausen, revolves around the concept of the house, and how, based on Bachelard's thesis, we construct it with our imagination and through our memory.
Aitor González research orbits around family and familial relationships, which become the arena through which he unravels dualities of given and constructed identity, factual and mythical storytelling, dreams, and reality. Drawing from personal experiences and fantastical additions
from his family’s narrative, Aitor finds parallels between this imaginative
storytelling and his own constructed identity. “I have been symbolizing my dad as
a house as I used to draw him similar when I was growing up as he would often be
resting from night shifts at Ford when I came home. The motif of houses seemed
to have been recurring for a while and I think they are inspired by my mother's
upbringing after the 1970's earthquake in Yungay,” he explains about the series of
works included in this exhibition.
Gillies Adamson Semple’w work is concerned with how we can treat sound with
the same physicality as any other material, building installations and mechanisms
to diagrammatically express our corporeal interaction with vibration and
resonance. He is interested in the treatment of sound as a means of environment
building and an indicator of site and place.
Giles Thackway is a researcher and maker with a studio practice based out of Chisenhale in London, UK. His practice investigates the influence of infrastructures and built environments on our moods, emotions, habits and behaviours. Through various mediums, Giles explores how examples of interiors, architecture, planning, logistics, online platforms and financial structures produce social space and in turn subjects. His research and works focus on the agency of individuals within these structural constraints. His practice moves beyond predefined categories of medium, singular definitions of a vocation and the walls that often separate various ways of learning, thinking and seeing.