ROSE WYLIE

Rose Wylie - Manor 2004 - Oil on Canvas - 183 x 188 cm - Courtesy WILLAS contemporary

ROSE WYLIE  

'The Curator is Present'

The Guardian crowned Rose Wylie Britain’s hottest new artist in 2010. Following a solo exhibition at the Tate Britain in 2013, the now 90-year-old has become an unexpected darling of the international art scene. 

In Norway, her work has been presented in solo exhibitions both at Haugar Art Museum [2013] and at Vestfossen Kunstlaboratorium [2015] - and we are thrilled to introduce her in Oslo with recent works on paper and paintings in an exhibition curated by her good friend and fellow artist and collector Morten Viskum. 

The exhibition presents recent lithographs, watercolours, and large-scale paintings from private Scandinavian collections, as well as the sculpture ‘The Collector’ by Morten Viskum and a portrait of Viskum painted by Wylie. 

Rose Wylie first began showing her large-scale folkloric compositions in the 1980s. Often inspired by simple motifs, including animals, insects, flowers and everyday imagery from rural Kent, Wylie also draws on a rich knowledge of art history, mass media and ancient iconography. Her work possesses an intense physicality, often resulting in rough texture and raw brushstrokes — she scratches out. She covers various elements, reworking the space until her depiction suits her visual memory. Text appears in many of her pieces, tying together narratives and illuminating characters. With a unique, playful style, Wylie interweaves patterns, motifs, vintage advertising, bizarre animals and historical accounts, transcending the aesthetics of memory. 

Her work is deeply rooted within the every day, and as a painter who draws a lot, Wylie points at how we navigate that every day, looking at things, picking stuff up, doing bits and pieces, watching television, reading the newspaper, pottering around the garden, painting a canvas, cooking sausages, draining pasta, and for Wylie, being an artist in 21st century Britain, those things are all tantamount.

In 2011 Rose Wylie won the Paul Hamlyn Prize for Visual arts, and in 2014 she received the John Moores Painting Prize. In 2010 Wylie became the only non-American artist in the Women to Watch exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington D.C., and in 2015 she became a member of the Royal Academy of Arts.

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With a series of controversial projects, Morten Viskum [b. 1965] has established himself as the artist Norway’s cultural media likes to discuss most. Through his performative works, he has shed light on a fear of the ephemeral and the strange that pervades our culture. Employing unconventional tools–including medical equipment, dead animals, cancer cells, and a deceased man’s hand–he challenges both the relationship between science and ethics and what art can morally embrace. 

Viskum works with installation, performance, photography, and painting and has been represented at various exhibitions nationally and internationally. The Italian publisher Skira published in 2016 a large monograph about Morten Viskum’s art practice.

The exhibition will present recent lithographs, watercolours and oil paintings, some borrowed from Scandinavian collections.

 

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An afternoon with Rose Wylie - on Vimeo

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