Sommer & Kohl

Paul McDevitt, A Journal of the Winds

06 Sep - 18 Oct 2008

Paul McDevitt
Estamos Jodidos, 2008
wall installation, oil on linen on MDF
ca. 200 x 350 cm
Paul McDevitt
The Natural II, 2008
oil on canvas
58 x 42 cm
Paul McDevitt
A Custom Loathsome to the Eye, Hateful to the Nose,
Harmful to the Brain, Dangerous to the Lungs, 2008
colour pencil, graphite, ink on paper
paper: 49,5 x 55 cm
Paul McDevitt
Renegade Wave, 2008
ballpoint pen, ink on paper
paper: 45 x 48 cm
frame: 57 x 60 cm
Paul McDevitt
For the Solace of our people and
Allurement of the Savages, 2008
ink on paper
paper: 43 x 48,5 cm
frame: 55 x 60,5 cm
Paul McDevitt
Heroic Spuds, 2008
ink on paper
paper: 24 x 21 cm
frame: 35,8 x 32,5 cm
Paul McDevitt
Quid Non, 2008
colour pencil, ink on paper
paper: 38 x 57 cm
frame: 50 x 69 cm
Paul McDevitt
The Black Stinking Fume Thereof, 2008
colour pencil, ink on paper
paper: 51 x 50 cm
frame: 63 x 61,5 cm
Paul McDevitt
El Fucu de Colón, 2008
billboard
252 x 356 cm
Paul McDevitt
A Journal of the Winds

exhibition 6 September until 18 October 2008

Sommer & Kohl are pleased to present Paul McDevitt's first solo exhibition in Germany.

A new body of paintings and drawings by British artist Paul McDevitt (*1972) takes as its point of origin the watercolours of Englishman John White, artist and 16th century colonist. White was governor of the first English colony in America at a time when Britain was just beginning to expand its empire.

Whereas McDevitt's recent work has focused on drawing parallels between religious solitaries and the artist in his studio, this group of works looks at voyages of discovery in both historical terms, and in the far more modest daily work in the studio. John White, despite enormous hardship, was in a position to see and document a completely new world. His daughter gave birth to the first European child born in America. Ships brought back tobacco and potatoes. After returning from business in England, White found the colonists had completely disappeared, leaving not a trace of building or person, including his daughter and granddaughter. What happened to them remains a mystery.

White’s is a history full of gaps. Many of his works were destroyed or lost. Many were copied and altered by other artists. In one painting White made of an Indian standing with legs crossed, the artist mistakenly painted the figure with two right feet. Later artists making copies of White’s image included his anatomical error. A Journal of the Winds employs these false starts, repeated mistakes, inconclusive, incomplete, and one-sided stories. Some works shown here are literally installed in fragments, suggesting a broken narrative. The potato and tobacco are used as motifs throughout the exhibition. Outside the gallery, a billboard shows a pile of potatoes. Some are cut in half and, while still wet, have been painted with watercolour to show a comic book version of imperial exploit(ation) – simplified in the extreme and without text. Inside the gallery, the traditional Indian use of tobacco to induce visions is explored in pencil drawings. For the Europeans in search of gold, it was in the tobacco plant that they eventually found El Dorado. The humble potato is turned into a tribal mask with cartoon eyes, suggesting how the sophisticated indigenous culture of America was made crude and savage by early settlers to justify exploitation. And the sea that carried hope for the Europeans, and destruction for the Indians, is ever present.

McDevitt's works have most recently been included in the exhibitions Supernatural, Kunsthalle Andratx, Mallorca (ES); Space to Draw, Jerwood Space, London (UK); Star Dust ou la Dernière Frontière, MAC/VAL Musée D’Art Contemporain Du Val-De-Marne, Paris (F) and Cult Fiction, The New Art Gallery, Walsall (UK).

For further information and/or images please contact Sommer & Kohl.

 

Tags: Paul McDevitt