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Artist’s statement
‘I gather, collate, re-use, layer, peel, burn, reveal, locate, question,
duplicate, play and photograph’
Kate MccGwire’s work asks questions about the very nature of beauty.
She’s intrigued by the possibility of envisaging beauty as something
more complex than merely what delights the senses: beauty can be about a
problem; it can be something that repels you or makes you question the
status quo. The idea of it as a cultural phenomenon, susceptible to
argument through the creative process, is one she finds fascinating.
Much of Kate’s work references Freud’s ‘Unheimlich’ (the uncanny, or,
literally, the ‘unhomely’) and seeks to explore, to quote Freud, ‘a
place where the familiar can somehow excite fear’. It also embraces
artistic notions of the Abject.
She will take an everyday thing or conceit that is intrinsically
discomforting and, by re-framing it, entice the viewer into re-examining
his preconceptions and prejudices – cultural, historical and personal –
about the everyday. The viewer’s response is visceral, the impact
immediate, the ideas triggered resonating in the mind somewhere beyond
rational interpretation.
Organic patterns, forms and materials have an instinctive draw; work may
look determinedly abstract to the naked eye, but by using a spiral or
circle, or a familiar material, the viewer’s gaze is lured inward, as if
into a ‘field of attraction’, only to be repulsed or even menaced by the
associations that unfold once ‘inside’. At the same time the scale and
delicacy of the work reinforce the potential for awe and beauty in the
unconventional.
Intrinsic to her method is the collecting and sorting of materials from
hundreds of different sources over a period of months, even years. In
turn, pieces evolve intuitively as if out of the subconscious, the
language evocative rather than purely illustrative. As the work takes
shape, a new, playful reality emerges, so that the object itself becomes
a sort of prism, refracting the layers of meaning and cultural
associations buried within, the quantity of materials used sometimes
deliberately overwhelming, as if charged with a power and ambition
beyond the reach they possess when seen in isolation.
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