Kate MccGwire
Kate MccGwire (born 1964) is an English sculptor who specializes in the medium of feathers. Her work experiments with the binary notions of beauty and disgust, malice and tranquillity, and the familiar yet otherworldly. Her use of pigeon feathers takes a waste product of the ‘rats with wings’ and elevates them to the status of art. By re-framing the object, placing it out of context, it generates a kind of ‘field of attraction’ around it, the viewer is left both seduced and alienated, relishing the spectacle but at the same time aware of something disquieting, something ‘other’.[1]
Much of MccGwire's practice references Freud's 'Unheimliche' (the uncanny, or, literally, the 'unhomely'), the idea of a place where the familiar can somehow excite fear. It also embraces artistic notions of the Abject. In so doing the artist creates a shift from a world in which objects sit in their conventional place and allows a new perspective, exposing the viewer, in the most visceral way possible, to the truths that lurk behind the familiar and to the reality of what it is to be human – a brutal but also unrelentingly beautiful consciousness of the ugly and the funereal, fear and disgust.[2]
MccGwire's exhibition history includes solo shows at All Visual Arts (2012) and Pertwee, Anderson and Gold (2011), as well as numerous group shows such as at Glasstress (2015) at the Venice Biennale[3] alongside artists such as Polly Morgan and Jake and Dinos Chapman. MccGwire's work is also collected by several notable figures in the art world including Charles Saatchi.[4][5]
MccGwire was born in Norwich, Norfolk.[5] She was educated at Manchester Polytechnic, Surrey Institute of Art & Design, University College and the Royal College of Art.[6] MccGwire uses a Dutch barge moored on the Thames near Hampton Court as her studio.[3]
References
- ↑ CVLT 'Wrest & Writhe: Interview with Kate MccGwire'
- ↑ Don't Panic 'Kate MccGwire'
- 1 2 "Kate MccGwire, artist: 'You have to be organised to work on a boat. Or you would be in a sea of pigeon'". The Independent. 29 October 2015. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
- ↑ Artist Website 'Kate MccGwire: Biography'
- 1 2 "Kate MccGwire". Saatchi Gallery. 2012. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
- ↑ "Kate MccGwire; Issue/Unthinking" (PDF). m2 Gallery. 15 January 2005. Retrieved 9 April 2016.