Light, Sound: BuiltMay 12 - June 7, 2009
Richard Reddaway
Organic
meets the immaculate in Richard Reddaway's new exhibition, 'Light,
Sound: Built', the artist's first show at Jonathan Smart Gallery for
nine years. Immaculate is the rimu veneer on the hand-made speakers in
Unresolved Music Part 1, their clean rectilinear forms presented as
clusters of the modular. This is a modernism that grows over as well as
out from the wall. But while organic, it also exudes measure, utter
control and restraint. That is, until one hears the sound. The crisp
dripping of water feels in step. Sonically, its ripple and bounce
around the space echo Reddaway's sculpted forms. But the shrill
whistling and tribal chanting of young men watching rugby is unexpected
- a layering of the sporting other brought in as surprise, as excess
even - as something right over-the-top.
Details of works |
Immaculate
too and similarly lush, are the sewn Swanndri bushshirts in Built (Soft
Sound). Stuffed with softness and sound, this work hangs from the wall
and spreads, or clambers, across the floor. These fabric extrusions
look almost poured and globular - Guston-like in figuration. For this
work is certainly haunted by the figure; interesting, given Reddaway's
very successful work of the late 80's & early 90's where he applied
various material skins ( broken crockery, records, shells) to the
wooden framing of stacked or repeated stick-figures. In many ways then,
'Light, Sound: Built' sees Reddaway in a significant return to form!
