Photo by David Rowan

Photo by David Rowan

The Hills Are Shadows

09 / 21 / 2019 - 11 / 24 / 2019

Matt Shane - Jim Holyoak

The hills are shadows, and they flow From form to form, and nothing stands; They melt like mist, the solid lands, Like clouds they shape themselves and go.

Alfred Lord Tennyson, excerpt from ‘In Memoriam’

 

Taking their exhibition title from part of a Tennyson poem, the collaborative partnership of Canada based artists Jim Holyoak and Matt Shane immediately make a statement, showing the poetic and mysterious side of their drawing practice. Their immersive drawing installations amalgamate notions of studio, gallery and domestic space. They are made in a marathon fashion, expanding across entire walls over the course of an exhibition. The artists sketch animals (real, imagined and extinct), landforms and architecture, and then gradually flesh out metamorphic landscapes with pencils, inky brooms, brushes, stencils, spritzers and atomizers. They crawl on drop sheets, climb ladders and respond to each other’s marks, oscillating between techniques of chance and intention. Their finished drawings represent a meandering conversation and a shared dream world between two traveling companions. The works in this exhibition showcase the prolific output of drawing from the artists, representing their own unique and distinct drawing practices but also the results of twenty collaborative projects together. Within the space are sections of three of their large installations as well as correspondence art, ephemera and a selection of small-scale works. During the first few weeks of the exhibition Jim and Matt will be on site creating a new work, growing from their existing pieces and responding to the scale of the First Floor Gallery.

 

This exhibition was held at the Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham with support from Manif D’art, the People’s Postcode Lottery and the Postcode Culture Trust.

Work in progress — Shipworms of the Nodosaur Photo by Jim Holyoak

Work in progress — Shipworms of the Nodosaur

Photo by Jim Holyoak