Join us for drinks and conversation on the opening night for Some Roses and their Phantoms, a group exhibition featuring Sandra Beccarelli, Camilla Bliss, Miranda Boulton, Florence Reekie and Sue Williams A’Court, presented by Darl.e and the Bear and Curated by Julie Wigg.
'Here some roses from a very different garden sit?, lie?, stand?, gasp, dream?, die? on white linen. They may serve you tea or coffee. As I saw them take shape on the canvas I was amazed by their solemn colors and their quiet mystery that called for – seemed to demand – some sort of phantoms. So I tried to give them their phantoms and their still-lifeness' Dorothea Tanning, 1952
Each artist’s work re-examines the narrative behind Surrealist artist Dorothea Tanning’s painting, Some Roses and Their Phantoms.
As contemporary female artists, how do they relate and question as Tanning did our expectations of what a still life painting is, in relation to the domestic and bourgeois ritual of 'table laying’. Upon this laid table roses are scattered like sad, misshaped animal-like creatures, brown from being picked and left to dry. A crumpled napkin, an un-ironed tablecloth with fold marks visible cover the surface of the table. The teapot has mutated into a mantis-like creature, a large rose peeps from behind the table - watching, waiting. A china plate can be seen under the cloth, covered, visible but hidden at the same time.
Painted some 10 years after the end of Surrealism, Tanning felt female artists had still not gained the recognition they deserved. Tanning’s other paintings of that era, The Rose and the Dog, and Poached Trout also refer to the despondency of domestic life, this offers a complete change to the ten years since her optimistic self portrait Birthday, a strong visual image of her, prepared to show herself, a strong women dominating the visual space, sexually charged, the multiple recession of doors showing the exciting adventures that lay ahead.