Christine Clark: Between Worlds

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Christine Clark: Between Worlds 7th November to 2nd December


Christine Clark: Between Worlds Christine Clark's richly detailed and highly evocative paintings have marked her out as one of the most imaginative and exciting young artists working in Scotland today. Her works, replete with imagery ranging from the everyday to the mystical, draw her viewers into a unique and mesmerising world, situated somewhere between the borders of fantasy and reality. ScotlandArt.com is delighted to present Christine Clark's newest work as the latest in our series of 'Artist Spotlight' events. To celebrate the launch on 7th November, we will be hosting a complimentary cocktail reception, and the artist will be present to discuss her work. The exhibition will run until the end of November.


Moving Between Worlds: The Art of Christine Clark 'Rooftop Rest', mixed media on paper, 90x70cm, £730

Speaking to Christine Clark about her artwork proves to be, in a key respect, very similar to the experience of viewing the paintings themselves. Both begin with looking for clues – for moments of clarity when the meaning of these artworks, elusively allusive as they always are, suddenly becomes apparent, and explicable. When Christine suggests that "switches, plugs taps appear in my work as I like the idea of ‘switching off’ from reality", I wonder why I didn't realise this before. In order to enter into her lavish fantasies, we are being invited by Christine to first of all disconnect from our everyday mental states. So with this the artist has provided a waymark, to guide us through her dense imaginative landscape; we have a clear and unambiguous significance to some of the myriad symbols - charms, jewels, household objects, discarded musical instruments, animals wild and tame – which populate it. Perhaps, following the clue to 'switch off' from reality, we can start to decipher what others might mean.


'Until we Part', oil on canvas, 95x80cm, £1,500

However, the artist soon tells me that others are simply trinkets she's collected, which 'filter subconsciously into the painting', and so any attempt to explain them rationally is confounded. Rational design and artist’s whim coexist and blend in the paintings, as well as in Christine's explanation of them, in such a way that we seem to be unable ever to know exactly what we know.

Rooftop Rest III, oil on board, 37x29cm, £430


'The Last of the Golden Leaves', mixed media on canvas, 100x100cm, ÂŁ1,800

Is that face, growing from the withered roots of that tree, intended as a sort of plaintive death mask – if so, does its present act of flourishing represent some kind of affinity between growth and decay? Am I missing something important? Or have I found something which, importantly, isn't actually there? Mired in this treacherous ground, our relief comes with the realisation that, notwithstanding their clear debts to symbolist painting, it is not in the nature of these works to insist upon any link between symbol and symbolised. There may be areas of clarity, but there is no forbidden ground; there may be clues, but there are no answers. These are paintings which systematically refuse to act as surrogates for our imaginations: to do the imagining for us. Instead,


they force us to map out the pitfalls and the dead ends, as well as the occasional coherent paths to wonder and understanding with which our own minds are made up. Clark points to the influence of music and poetry in her work; how “emphasis and pause and delivery” create “an overwhelming energy or feeling”. Literary influences are frequently evoked; one of the ambitious centre-pieces of the current collection, depicting a discarded armchair in a sky-scape which is by turns ominous and blissfully calm, is named ‘Where the Sea meets the Moon-blanched Land’ after Matthew Arnold’s ‘Dover Beach’ (1851); elsewhere, there are cuttings from poetry books worked into the actual fabric of the paintings themselves.

'Where the sea meets the moonblanched Land', oil on board, 120x120cm, £4,000

When I ask Christine about these, her answer is maddeningly elusive: “Some texts do act as clues”. Which texts? How can we tell? ‘Dover Beach’ is most famous for the ‘ignorant armies' who 'clash by night’ in the poem’s final line, and who came for the entire Victorian epoch to signify the loss of clear purpose - of unconditional trust in


any overarching universal order - which came at the hands of scientific advance. The discarded armchair in Clark’s painting could perhaps represent a lingering relic from the artist's imagining of some such former time; perhaps a benign structuring presence once sat there, orchestrating the ethereal harmony of stars and sky, sea and land – though the chair itself now also seems to dissolve, to become the very stars it may once have been employed to control. In an older painting, the famous line of Auden's - 'pack up the moon and dismantle the sun’ – is scrawled on the edge of the canvas, where it morphs gradually from recognisable words into incongruous letters and finally into illegible lines; from the representational nature of language into the purely aesthetic nature of linear form. Below: 'One Being', oil on board, 38x30cm, £460 Bottom Right: 'Erode', oil on canvas, 50x50cm, £750 Bottom Left: 'Beneath the Moon', oil on canvas, 30x30cm, £460


Once again, we have to forget whatever systematic logic we held as true before: to disconnect – even from something as fundamental as language – in order to dimly intuit the beautiful, chaotic order which characterises Clark’s transcendent world.

'A New Chapter', mixed media on paper, 70x90cm, £680


Between moments of disconnection and reconnection, between order and chaos - what is consistent throughout Clark’s mythology is its situation upon the threshold. The recurring deep, ethereal blues which form the backgrounds could evoke either dusk or dawn – but always one or the other, always a time at which night and day exchange. The motif of dangling keys suggests a movement between boundaries; the intricately constructed trees at once suggest growth and decay. The paintings are both wonderfully humorous and deeply solemn - though some of Clark's symbols have a rich significance, others she avers are simply there to “poke fun at myself, social situations, or the more mundane parts of life”, to “make them into an obscure or slightly comical narrative.” Glasses of red wine appear just because the artist “loves red wine”.

'Head in the Clouds', oil on board, 30x38cm, £460


In the new works which appear in the current collection, there is a marked stylistic development which sees Clark adopt a more directly linear mode of expression; the discarded piano in her ‘Nocturne’ is evoked with just a few loose strokes of gold. It almost feels as though the artist is so thoroughly steeped in her own mythology that she is confident enough to depict a little less, and leave a little more of the work to the imagination; less to recognition, and more to intuition, to chance. She suggests that these are works concerned with balancing “rawness and tension”; as with music, the concern is with eliciting emotional states immediately, through the sheer beauty of form. In ‘Nocturne’, content and form collide as the subject of the piano becomes both the symbol of this musical influence, and the key melody of the piece; its gold is counterpointed by the dots of yellow ochre which depict the forest plants, and harmonised by the alternating darkness and lightness of the background blues.

'Nocturne', oil on board, 120x120cm, £4,000


Gustav Klimt once declared that ‘Art is a line around your thoughts’. Increasingly, I think Christine Clark’s painting has come to challenge this notion; her art has instead become the membrane through which our thoughts, by turns, escape and return to themselves. Christine professes that “I want to take people on some kind of journey”; for me, it is a journey with the qualities of a dance, where the important thing is not the destination, but rather the sensation of motion. Either way, with a particular kind of rhythmic insistence, the paintings refuse to leave us unmoved. Sam Reilly, November '15

'The Sound of the Sea', oil on canvas, 50x50cm, £750


Thank you for visiting ScotlandArt ScotlandArt.com is a welcoming art gallery based in the centre of Glasgow, boasting a diverse and well-respected collection of works by some of the most impressive contemporary artists based in or inspired by Scotland. Alongside our monthly programme of exhibition launches we also arrange mixers and networking events for local businesses and societies, lease artworks for commercial and domestic use and offer a professional advice and facilitation service for those looking to commission original artworks for their homes and offices. Email enquiries@scotlandart.com to learn more about our services or to request to join our mailing list and receive invites to our gallery events.


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