Pasquino by Catherine Story. An exhibition

Cooke Latham Gallery, a new space for contemporary art located in London’s Battersea will open its third exhibition PASQUINO by Catherine Story on the 6 September. Catherine Story’s practice explores the intersections between two and three dimensionality, and the space between sculpture and painting. Informed by one another, her sculptural and painted works are theatrically rendered and influenced by the complex approaches of Cubism, lm and Art Deco architecture, especially pioneers of the 20th century such as Picasso, Chaplin and Joseph von Sternberg.

“While making this show I’m thinking again about symbols of connection and looking at sculptures that are often hidden or overlooked. Pasquino is the most famous of Rome’s ‘talking statues’, standing on a corner overlooking Piazza Braschi where it was unearthed in the 15th Century. Sometimes thought to be named after a witty local tradesman, this battered Hellenistic-style statue has been a place for Romans and travellers to x anonymous satires and poems ever since. He was likely carved in the 3rd Century BC, but the beautiful Art Deco friezes on the front of the Bonwit Teller store on New York’s 5th Avenue only lasted fifty years. Despite pleas from the Metropolitan Museum of Art who wanted to place them in their collection, in 1980 Donald Trump ordered his workers to sledgehammer them while clearing the lot for his tower. In contrast, the long marble frieze by Gilbert Bayes (1931) on the front of what is now the Odeon Shaftsbury Avenue withstood the Blitz. ‘Drama through the Ages’ depicts actors and troubadours from ancient Greece to the 1930s in one long parade that is often overlooked by passers-by. Down the road, off Piccadilly, there’s a giant owl or eagle on a 6th-floor roof quietly watching the city. He’s too high up to be London’s Pasquino so I continue looking for a secret statue, a place to pin our own protestations of love, and disquiet“. Artist, Catherine Story. 

Based in London, Catherine Story’s work has been exhibited in the following public institutions: Shadow (PEER, 2017-18) and Painting Now: Five Contemporary Artists (Tate Britain, London, 2013). Other exhibitions include Recent British Painting (Grimm Gallery, Amsterdam, 2012); and Astoria (2014), Angeles (2012), Cinema (2010) and PYLON (2009), all at Carl Freedman Gallery, London. In 2015 she was awarded an Abbey Fellowship at the British School in Rome. Her work is included in both private and public collections.

Cooke Latham Gallery opened its doors to the public in December 2018. The space aims to support e merging and mid-career artists with a focus on those creating new forms of artistic language. With its slower-paced exhibitions and its intimate setting, the gallery is dedicated to the experience of contemporary art.

About the artist:
Catherine Story studied at Central School of Art, London, the Ruskin School of Art, Oxford, and the Royal Academy Schools. Story’s work has been exhibited in the following public institutions: Shadow (PEER, 2017-18) and Painting Now: Five Contemporary Artists (Tate Britain, London, 2013). Other exhibitions include Recent British Painting (Grimm Gallery, Amsterdam, 2012); and Astoria (2014), Angeles (2012), Cinema (2010) and PYLON (2009), all at Carl Freedman Gallery, London. In 2015 she was awarded an Abbey Fellowship at the British School in Rome. Her work is held in both private and public collections, including Tate, London and the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.

COOK E   L A T H A M   G A L L E R Y, London
Catherine Story
PASQUINO
PRIVATE VIEW: 5 September, 7-9pm
EXHIBITION: 6 SEPTEMBER – 1 NOVEMBER 2019

Photo credits: Cooke Latham Gallery and Catherine Story.


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