ART, DESIGN & CULTUREARTLa Lanta Fine Art Dual Show: ‘Constructed Ecologies’

La Lanta Fine Art Dual Show: ‘Constructed Ecologies’

Two British artists based in southern Thailand feature in this dual exhibition at La Lanta Fine Art from Jan. 8-Feb. 23, 2022.

La Lanta Fine Art is pleased to announce an upcoming dual exhibition. “Constructed Ecologies” features etchings, woodblock prints, dioramas and papercuts by two British artists who are based in the south of Thailand: Dolores de Sade on Koh Samui and Ralph Kiggell in Krabi. The tropical region is home to rainforests, limestone hills, islands, beaches and bays, as well as huge areas of land covered in rubber and oil-palm plantations.

In response to this lush beauty, aware of erosions to the tropical ecosystem and the restrictions of COVID-19 and lockdowns, the two artists draw our attention to nature again, by recording and reinterpreting it in a series of constructed ecologies.

Plant Chimaera I_Woodblock print on paper_60 x 45 cm_Ralph Kiggell

Ralph Kiggell makes prints and collages of imagined plant species, pieced together as chimera, like the ‘lion-goat-snake’ monster in Greek myth from which the term comes. His process of water-based printmaking mostly uses materials drawn from nature: blocks of wood, mineral pigments and handmade papers from Japan, Korea and Thailand. He works with pieces of wood that are jigsaw-cut from larger blocks and reassembles them as prints. In other images, he cuts out plant forms from paper and collages them together. This assembling of pieces mimics the gathering of plant specimens and their recordings dried and pressed for scrap books, as botanical illustrations or laid out in museum vitrines.

Junction 4, A2_Etching_23 x 16 cm_Dolores de Sade

Dolores de Sade also collects botanical specimens, in this case mainly broken branches and driftwood. In a group of dioramas, she recombines these gathered elements with other found objects in imagined settings and hybrid landscapes that contain new meanings and insights. Also shown are a series of de Sade’s exquisitely detailed etchings, using a process popularised by eighteenth- and nineteenth-century horticulturalists to record and share their plant knowledge among an international audience of scientists. The twisting, rooted growths she depicts are bound and tethered by structures that push up and pull down, that protect and constrict.

In the same way that horticulturalists might graft various plants to incorporate properties from their parent plants as a way of cloning, both artists clone, too, in their imaginative, sometimes grotesque, compositions. This piecing together of parts is like the old parlour game of “consequences,” or a similar game known as “exquisite corpses” – used by the Surrealists in the last century. Somehow, in their twists and turns these chimera also mirror the discordance and morphing of our globalised world. 

Plant Chimaera II_Woodblock print on paper_60 x 45 cm_Ralph Kiggell

Constructed Ecologies” will be on display from Jan. 8 until Feb. 23, 2022. The exhibition can also be viewed online at www.lalanta.com 

La Lanta Fine Art
Unit B, 3rd Floor2198/10-11, Narathiwas Rajanakarin Rd. Soi 22, Chong Nonsi, Yannawa
Bangkok 10120; Tel 02 050 7882

Tootall_23x16cm__Dolores de Sade

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