Exhibitions

Helen MacAlister
Hutton's Rock

  • Helen MacAlister

    Gramsci's Prison Letters

    2002

    oil on canvas with lamination

    18.5 x 61.5 cm

  • Helen MacAlister

    Sverige

    2002

    oil on canvas with lamination and hinge

    30 x 30 cm

  • Helen MacAlister

    Bottleneck

    2002

    oil on canvas with lamination

    18.5 x 13.5 cm

  • Helen MacAlister

    Cauliflower Ear, Tasty Flavor, Not Unlike That of Cauliflower (detail)

    2002

    oil on canvas

    30 x 30 cm

  • Helen MacAlister

    High Mass

    2002

    oil on canvas with lamination

    40 x 30 cm

  • Helen MacAlister

    Seaforth Highlander, Son of the Bright One

    2002

    oil on canvas with lamination and pin

    20 x 20 cm

  • Helen MacAlister

    Hampden Legs

    2002

    oil on canvas with lamination

    20 x 20 cm

Helen MacAlister
Hutton's Rock
10 April - 16 May 2002

A recent visit to Helen's studio was conceptual. All the canvases were stacked against the wall, but their contents were consigned entirely to a set of lime green files. The artist arranged the bare canvases on the floor. Small, laminated images were floated onto their surfaces. Notebooks and books of poetry with flagged pages were drawn from a pile. Every aspect of each painting existed in her mind's eye, mapped out, pared down, edited. She 'read' us through the exhibition.

Language -­ oral and visual ­- is central to Helen's art. She stitches words and laminated images to canvas, allowing one idea to chase another. Sometimes the 'story' ­ a quote from a poet, an old proverb or simply a beautiful line read and noted down accompanies a work as an attendant label evocatively linked to the colour, form and image of the painting.

Bottom Drawer depicts a chest of drawers, the lowest one open. Its 'story' is a quote from a young Scottish writer, Des Dillon:

Septic wants to cry. I know cos his eyes look the same as mine when I want to cry but I can't. All the cryin runs down the inside of yer face an loads up yer bottom lip. Then yer bottom lip starts tremblin wi the weight. Ma Da calls it the bottom drawer bein out.

Why Hutton's Rock? This figure of the 18th century Scottish Enlightenment is known as the father of geology. His prescient book, Theory of the Earth is based on a reading of the earth's history through rock sections on Salisbury Crags - Arthur's Seat - and his theory of permanent flux has been a source of inspiration for many artists and scientists alike.

An illustrated catalogue accompanies the exhibition with an essay by Prof. Duncan Macmillan

Exhibitions
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