FIGURES IN MOTION
GROUP SHOWTHE PIPE FACTORY, GLASGOW
24 - 28 MAR, 2O22
EXHIBITING ARTISTS:
Aaron Rigal, Amanda Seibæk, Bruno Diaz, Jameela Gordon-King, Leon Scott-Engel, Purdey Williams, Rowan Bazley
‘To maintain circles there must be an engine running them, running the separate spirals like growth rings in trees, they remake themselves every year and within another ring comes more space and room to fill with stuff of importance. With the continuation of the rings for some time you step aside and watch.’ — From Cirkel by Amanda Seibaek
Figures in Motion is a collection of works made in the seemingly constant motion of a post-pandemic-art-school, and captures the aspirations of seven artists on the point of entering an art world which is uncertain and exciting. As Amanda Seibaek writes in her poem Cirkel, ‘all I have ever done is living in constant motion.’
The desire to capture something which is temporary and fast moving is something photographer Eadweard Muybridge was doing when he published The Human Figure in Motion in 1879, in which people running, fighting or jumping were photographed against gridded backgrounds, with the intention that the workings of the body could be studied and enjoyed. Just like how a parent might want to take photos of their children or celebrate their first day at school, life is full of moments where we are rewarded if we stop and look at how quickly berthing is moving around us, how much we might have grown.
Aaron Rigal, Amanda Seibæk, Bruno Diaz, Jameela Gordon-King, Leon Scott-Engel, Purdey Williams, Rowan Bazley
PRESS RELEASE
‘To maintain circles there must be an engine running them, running the separate spirals like growth rings in trees, they remake themselves every year and within another ring comes more space and room to fill with stuff of importance. With the continuation of the rings for some time you step aside and watch.’ — From Cirkel by Amanda Seibaek
Figures in Motion is a collection of works made in the seemingly constant motion of a post-pandemic-art-school, and captures the aspirations of seven artists on the point of entering an art world which is uncertain and exciting. As Amanda Seibaek writes in her poem Cirkel, ‘all I have ever done is living in constant motion.’
The desire to capture something which is temporary and fast moving is something photographer Eadweard Muybridge was doing when he published The Human Figure in Motion in 1879, in which people running, fighting or jumping were photographed against gridded backgrounds, with the intention that the workings of the body could be studied and enjoyed. Just like how a parent might want to take photos of their children or celebrate their first day at school, life is full of moments where we are rewarded if we stop and look at how quickly berthing is moving around us, how much we might have grown.