top of page

CONTEXTS

​

Simyrn Gill

​

Simryn Gill artistic practice is concerned with the “material culture of humankind”, she is interested in the rich seam of knowledge that the “accumulated matter of “humankind" can elicit (Gill et al., 2008., p.59). 

John Brash 712.jpg

Heart of the matter, 1994, Installation Comprising 49 parts: Tiffinbox, Cassette player, Rice Dumping, Tin Can Run Over by a Car, Poetry Shard Found on a Beach, Shoe and Artist's Lips, Cast variously in Damar Resin, Agar, jelly, Tin, Clay From a Road Development Site, Cow Dung, Glutinous Rice, Latex, Rubber, Paper, Original Objects and the Cast Copies were Shown in a Grid on the Floor. Destroyed

I am interested in the way in which Gill presents her artwork, often acting like a “material anthropologist”, there is a “conscious use of museological techniques of display”(Ibid., p.59). Her casts and found objects are arranged like archaeological artifacts, the material remnants of mankind. There is a sense of letting the work tell its own story. As if it should be left to be analyzed over a period to get a future understanding of it. We share the same need to record and uncover the hidden vestiges of life. I very much enjoy her casting works and feel there is a kindred spirit in the way we use our own idiosyncratic methods of discovery, categorization and display.  

gill-throwback-2007-detail.jpg

Throwback, 2007,
Interior parts of Tata truck, termite mound soil, river clay, laterite, seashells, fruit skins, leaves, bark and fibre, flowers, glue, resin, milk
Buxton Collection Melbourne

The ink casts that I presented at Wilson’s Road and Copeland Gallery have been influenced by this approach. There is a similar feeling and mood to the way the work was presented in vitrines and on the floor; a strong kinship in our approaches. She is “rigorous, yet sensual, conceptual yet tactile” (Ibid., p.7). I loved her exploration of machinery, using unusual casting techniques to produce an array of semi organic components that have been somehow reclaimed by nature.  

2010.42.1.original.jpg

Simryn Gill, "Caress (Royal Quiet Deluxe)," 2010. Intaglio with graphite on Japanese Kozu paper, 96.5 x 61 cm. 

I am furthermore influenced by her rubbing series, Caress (Royal Quiet Deluxe) 2010, in which Gill beautifully manages to get into every nook and cranny of old typewriters. The work, distorted and bent out of shape, seems to be evocative of it losing its place in the world as a working machine. There is a “Sense of melancholy” and an “attempt to capture the passage of time” (Pesenti et al., p.20). This is a feeling I also want to share with the viewer in my own printing machinery rubbings.  

​

In keeping with my continued interest in printing technology, I am interested taking rubbings of a thirty-year-old inkjet printer and scanner (this maybe beyond the remit of this course). I plan to use new paper, Japanese Kozo much like Gill, which I have discovered is a malleable and strong paper for rubbings in which navigating difficult bends, corners and curves will be essential. I hope this will make the work more sculptural in nature and further continue my research into expanded field of drawing. 

0000009590.jpg

Untitled, 2006, 123 Books, 30 Custom-Made  Boxes Holding Plastic Bags Containing Collections of Words Torn From Books.

I am also interested in the way the artist uses the paper in books, in her case “erasing..through tearing” in mine perhaps a chance to really play with some more of the conceptual parameters of how surface can affect rubbings in the future (Gill et al., 2008., p.61).  

References

​

Gill, S., Morgan, J., Storer, R., & Taussig, M. T. (2008). In Museum of

 

Pesenti, A., Tex, H. and Hammer Museum (2015). Apparitions : frottages and rubbings from 1860 to now. Los Angeles: Hammer Museum ; Houston.

© 2022 By Tom Harper

bottom of page