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DTSTART:20260329T020000
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UID:MEC-16fb50d54a3d007bf315f284d548954e@ryenews.org.uk
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200203T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200203T193000
DTSTAMP:20200212T081113Z
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CREATED:20200212
LAST-MODIFIED:20200212
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TRANSP:OPAQUE
SUMMARY:Supernature, an exhibition of paintings
DESCRIPTION: Rye Creative Centre  are proud to host PaintLounge‘s touring exhibition which explores the personal and political aspects of humanity’s relationship with the natural world. Once fantastical ideas offered by science fiction have quickly become scientific fact and sometimes seem unimaginative compared to current scientific research and predictions. How do we as individuals respond?\nOn show are paintings by Susan Absolon, Paula MacArthur, Joe Packer and Paul Smith.\nExhibition continues weekdays 12-7:30pm until 28 February.\nSusan Absolon“Be aware of the time it was,And the names of those present.  Leave nothing unsaid.The shape and colour Of the shadows as they passWill help you tell the story.And in telling the story,Process the grief you will feel.”Susan Absolon’s painting Standing Rock takes its title from the 2016-17 Sioux Indian Dakota Access Pipeline protest.  It’s a painting that reflects on mortality, personal loss, the environment and patriarchal power.\n \nJoe Packer\n“At the house I grew up in,” Joe Packer says, “You could walk straight out of the back door into a wood. It was in a small place called Shottesbrooke in Berkshire. Childhood memories involve being in the enclosed, interior/exterior space of a wood. The filtering of light through trees and foliage.” He says his paintings are not of those places, but he thinks of them collectively as “some sort of landscape and somehow connected to places familiar to me where I grew up.”\n \nPaula MacArthur\nRecent works explore the geometry and imperfections in natural forms. Removed from their original context these organic and mineral specimens become icons; they appear alien and unfamiliar, inviting questions around the increasing disconnect between humanity and nature.\n \nPaul Smith\n‘My work documents my interest in the lost and the found, what is passing out of memory and what is synthesised as trace in the landscape. Exploring lost places and capturing the essence of a moment of abandonment has been part of my practice since my earliest work, photographing the post-industrial landscape of the North East. More recently I have used these explorations of localities on the verge of returning to unofficial wilderness in dialogue with found material.\n\n\n\n
URL:http://ryecreativecentre.co.uk/upcoming-exhibitions/?mc_cid=155cf56414&mc_eid=2a0228c1a4
ORGANIZER;CN=Rye Creative Centre:MAILTO:arts@ryecreativecentre.co.uk
CATEGORIES:Culture
LOCATION:Rye Creative Centre, New Road, Rye, TN31 7LS
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