Marco
Sanges
'The Indecent Eye'
26 May - 21 June 2014
artist
THE INDECENT EYE
by E.S.Jones
Marco
Sanges cordially invites his viewers to enter his extraordinary
worlds. A fantastic storyteller, this artist creates cinematic
sequences from his photographs. As we peer through the silvered
lens, distortion suggests all is meaningless, that nothing has
purpose. Within such surreal walls, logical arguments fall into
nonsense, eloquent speech collapses into gobbledegook- and the
inevitable outcome will be silence. As a result, Sanges’ players are
trapped in cruelly endless mimes, menaced relentlessly by
incomprehensible outside forces. Aghast, afraid, astonished, they
gesture helplessly from the other side of their screens, enormously
exaggerated.
Marco Sanges’ works are peopled by uncanny, larger
than life characters. His untidy troupe of old money and sugar
daddies wear powdered wigs and brylcremed toupees at jaunty angles.
From lavish opium dens, gentlemen peer out suspiciously through
tobacco-smoked monocles. They pose blindfolded and androgynous,
morbidly fat or incredibly thin with ribs like spiral staircases.
Tulle-skirted girls wilt in velvet chairs waiting for the end-
resigned to the fact that it is probably already written. With regal
noses and cupid’s bows, stooping drag queens wear fox furs attached
by teeth to tail. Tall ladies politely face the wall, small ones run
amok under madly darkened eyebrows.
Darkly enchanting, these photographs are touching in
their depiction of human frailty and strength. Once the metaphysical
rug is whipped out from under your feet, you are forced to come to a
conclusion, make your own mistakes and see the funny side. Suddenly,
you too are part of the picture, rooted to the spot, wildly
gesturing and making peculiar faces. Afterwards you might scratch
your head and wonder what just happened, but Sanges is a magician,
an unhinged puppet master with a camera. As you step back out into
the June afternoon, come rain or shine you may feel you’ve a touch
of sunstroke- but it’s only your mind playing tricks on you again.
Alexey Lyubimkin
'City / Lights'
26 May - 21 June 2014
artist
LUMINO-CITIES
by E.S.Jones
‘Architecture
is the most stylish way of culture representation, and… like many
people, I like to make my own discoveries. In this variety of city
landscapes and cultural traditions no creative person can remain
indifferent. I often carry my camera with me, which becomes my
interpreter and even my partner… London is one of the most beautiful
cities in the world for me.’- Alexey Lyubimkin
The photographs of the architect Alexey Lyubimkin are
love letters to the cities he encounters. He unfolds the lines of
trees and buildings as though they were simply blueprints of the
original city design. His lens is a magnifying glass that
scrutinises the things our naked eye cannot see, as he presents the
ever changing landscapes.
Borrowing from an old tinting technique, Lyubimkin
uses a modern myriad of solero hues. Metallic rain falls in pins and
needles over smoothly inked barcodes, finally slipping off the page.
Printer margins drag their heels in orange and pink while clouds
change like the Northern Lights or a heat sensitive T-shirt. The
artist’s preoccupation with colour emphasises the importance of
noticing beauty- even to our rat race during rush hour. If we were
to look up from the pavement for just one moment, we might spot a
streetlamp glancing off the gutter at a perfect angle, or see how
branches transform the sky into a stained glass window.
The black and white compositions are poetic views of
Italy, from the morning sun on vineyards and cypresses, to the long
tall shadows of the afternoon where dark trees and bright clouds
copy each other’s airy shapes. Heatwaves and summer storms give way
to the far off scattered lights of an evening village. Whilst these
works are graphically different to the cityscapes, the artist’s
extraordinary sense of wonder is maintained even in the idyllic.
Whether we love or hate where we live, we
subconsciously give ourselves context by our perceived relationship
to environment. Working out how it all fits together, and then how
to live within that space brings a sense of belonging. If we are not
present to our surroundings at all then we will always feel at odds-
and be homesick wherever we go. The artist gets us standing in place
to marvel at those forms around us, and find out our personal
geometry. Rolling out the bridges and streets under our feet like
carpets, Lyubimkin invites us into the picture- and to finally feel
like we’re home.
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