A dynamic new exhibition at Castlefield Gallery will explore fresh ways of thinking about the relationship between painting, sculpture and architecture.

Housed in the Gallery’s distinct architect-designed interior, the new collection brings together site-specific ‘spatial paintings’ by Jo McGonigal with paintings and sculptures by Sir Frank Bowling.

Each artist’s practice has a highly imaginative and unconventional engagement with pictorial and physical space, and 40 Years of the Future: Jo McGonigal x Frank Bowling offers a unique chance to see work from two esteemed artists side-by-side.

In his book Frank Bowling: Sculpture (2022), writer and curator Sam Cornish shares a story of Bowling receiving an invitation from Castlefield Gallery in the 1980s to exhibit his paintings alongside the work of a contemporary sculptor. As a response, Bowling provided the sculptures himself.

This led to a solo exhibition of Bowling’s paintings, works on paper and sculpture at the gallery back in 1988. Bowling made a series of welded steel sculptures largely put together from the by-products of an engineering firm next to his studio.

Like his paintings, the sculptures have multiple influences, playfully mixing references from high modernism, classical African sculpture, cubism and Russian constructivism.

Except for a tour of this work at the time, the public has rarely had access to Bowling’s sculptures since, making Jo McGonigal x Frank Bowling that bit more special.

Jo McGonigal, Unsaid. So-said. Missaid. (2019) at Edinburgh College of Art. Image courtesy of the artist.

Meanwhile, McGonigal’s paintings leave the constraints of the canvas behind, interacting directly with the environment in which her works are placed. McGonigal is interested in the interaction between painting and architecture as well as deconstructing the internal architecture of painting itself.

Her recent works involve applying layers of traditional gesso, normally used to prime canvases, directly onto the gallery walls before introducing lines of coloured chalk, piles of pigment geometric structures, textile and archaeological elements into formal abstract compositions.

Through these combinations, McGonigal aims to activate the body just as much as the eye through her work.

This special exhibition forms part of Castlefield Gallery’s 40-year anniversary celebrations. As part of the new collection, an in-conversation evening with Ben Bowling and Jo McGonigal will be taking place on Sat 19 Oct. Advanced booking is required here.

40 Years of the Future: Jo McGonigal x Frank Bowling will run from Sun 20 Oct – Sun 2 Feb. Entry is free and no advance booking is needed. You can find out more about the exhibition here.

Featured image: Jo McGonigal, Act Seven: Paler, Blinder

A Manchester Wire Partnership post
Sun 20 Oct - Sun 2 Feb, Castlefield Gallery,
2 Hewitt St, Greater, Manchester M15 4GB
Words:
Bradley Lengden
Published on:
Thu 17 Oct 2024