Lines of Thought
A series of installations, photographs and other artworks that explore the use of line are going on show at east London’s Parasol Unit next week, exploring how the meaning and use of line varies from artist to artist and generation to generation.
We love the primeval-looking works of Hemali Bhuta, an Indian artist who creates site-specific installations such as Stepping Down – a dramatic piece that makes for a cave-like experience, using several thousand wax stalactites to simulate candles.
Fred Sandback’s work from the 1960s is distinctly minimalist in its aesthetic, looking at line in its most clinical form; while the enormous doodling of Turkish team,
Özlem Gunyol and Mustafa Kunt aim to provide a comment on geopolitical issues, with the lines representing the crossover of different nationalities and the idea of borders between countries.
Source: Photo: Cem Yücetas
American artist Adrian Esparza will be exhibiting a new work, which also draws its inspiration from the idea of national borders. For the piece, Esparza mounts a traditional Mexican blanket, or serape, onto the wall, which is then partially unwound. The cotton thread is then weaved through a grid of nails to form a geometric pattern, while also referencing the idea of history unravelling.
Lines of Thought runs from 29 February – 1 May at the Parasol Unit, 14 Wharf Road, London N1
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