Visual art exhibitions and events with a platform for critical writing
Crawford Arts Centre, St Andrews
13 January 5 March
Reviewed by: Catriona Black
The entrance to Pamela Sos exhibition at the Crawford Arts Centre boasts the least macho homage to minimalism that its possible to imagine. Fifteen squares of plastic grass sit in a neat grid on the floor. As well as strictly geometrical arrangements of plastic flowers, the squares contain rogue elements: exotic paper flowers on tall wire stalks each a unique product of the artists workshops last year in Manchester combined with contributions from the exhibitions visitors.
It was in the unlikely setting of Hill of Tarvit, a stately home near Cupar, that the Chinese-Scottish artist found the inspiration for her flowers. The paper templates are derived directly from the patterns on plates and cups in the mansion house, whose strong collection of Chinese porcelain is testament to Britains historic tea-trade with China.
While So has previously explored the opium-filled underbelly of that tea-trade, this work moves into less toxic realms of botany. Large photographs show paper flowers nestling surreptitiously amongst weeds in an old greenhouse, and in shrubs at Glasgows Botanic Gardens. Others, taken by her father, show Sos family in their Chinese garden (now a public park) and inserted like ghosts on the stairs at Hill of Tarvit.
A series of slides, both digital and actual, catalogue Chinese plants now naturalised in Western Europe. The metaphor is clear: that people, like flowers, have been transplanted from China to Scotland, but despite Sos research, the idea remains too under-developed to sustain interest. This could be explained by the number of projects in which So has recently played a part. She has shown flair and ingenuity in her past work, and the research from this years residency in St Andrews will no doubt prove bountiful in time to come. So far though, its best described as work-in-progress.
Writer detail:
Catriona Black is an animator, and art critic for the Sunday Herald.
Venue detail:
Fife Contemporary Art & Craft
Town Hall, Queens Gardens, St Andrews KY16 9TA
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