Posts tagged: 2024

Jack Jameson, Arcadia; Queer by Nature, 2023-24

Artist: Jack Jameson

Title: Arcadia; Queer by Nature

Year: 2023 – 2024

Medium: Sculpture and accompanying video

Duration: 4 minutes, 44 seconds

Accession Number:

Acquisition info: 

Jack Jameson’s work presents a model utopia, inspired by mythology and folklore. In this world nature prevails, and the ‘forest nymph, water siren and rock troll dwell in in harmony – free to be’. The work combines craft, costume, 3D scanning, printing and rendering, photography, and animation.

Jameson is a queer multidisciplinary artist who works across physical and digital mediums to depict ‘unworldly narratives of the queer form… with fantastical narratives or comic depictions’. They see their work as a form of gender performance, and draw inspiration from across sci-fi, fantasy, technology, fashion and queer culture. Previous projects include direction, production design and costume for local film projects, music videos, and commercial campaigns.

 



Adam Rawlinson, ‘The birds will sing, that you are part of everything’, 2024

Artist: Adam Rawlinson

Title: The birds will sing, that you are part of everything

Year: 2024

Medium: Oil on canvas

Dimensions: H: 200cm W: 160cm

Acquisition info:
Rawlinson is an abstract painter primarily working in oils. His work explores the natural world, with a particular focus on lichen – a symbiotic natural organism. He takes interest in their ‘often-unnoticed and underappreciated significance within our ecology, highlighting the extent of our vital relationship with everything that makes up life on earth’.
Using abstraction, gestural mark-making and a range of painterly techniques to ‘give life to’ his paintings, he builds up rich and textural images on large scale canvases. The works seek to manipulate the act and experience of looking; and provide spaces of contemplation and reflection. They form a basis for wider philosophical enquiries, drawing on existentialism and phenomenology, around ‘what it means to be alive’, and what our individual and collective place in the world might be.