13 Bridges: Harry Adams Corrected

Jimmy Cauty & Harry Adams
Curated by STOT21

BLACK CUBE GALLERY, FISH ISLAND

13th July - 13th September 2023

"Some artists don't know when to stop, others barely even start. Harry Adams makes a promising start on half imagined landscapes but consistently fails to see the bigger picture.

By deftly dropping a few thousand tons of concrete and tarmac into the unfinished scenes the potential is realised and the completed landscape is now in perfect dis-harmony with 21st century infrastructure."

- Jimmy Cauty

Available to view now at www.stot21.com

Editioned works signed by Jimmy Cauty and Harry Adams available from L-13.org

COLLIDER Part 4 Opening in Stoke-On-Trent

You are warmly invited to join HARRY ADAMS at the Public Preview of COLLIDER Part 4: A Reprise (The End)

COLLIDER Part 4
A Reprise (The End)

6 - 8 pm
Friday 25th March

Airspace Gallery
4 Broad Street, Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent ST1 4HL
Exhibition continues until 10th Aprll


HEAR THE OAKS SING FOR THE LAST TIME

COLLIDER Part 4 is the final chapter of HARRY ADAMS' Collider series, an extensive exhibition of brand new 'screen paintings' - a mixture of painting and screen printing - enveloping a grove of maturing oak saplings, nurtured with care over the last 4 years by the artist, and returning triumphantly to the scene of their first tentative steps into the real world.

In 2018's Nothing Remains Unchanged But The Clouds, Harry Adams exhibited those formative oaks as escapees from the painterly landscapes - an adversarial provocation to the traditional artform. Here, they return, boldly, in a coming-of-age, to stake their own place, in their own right, before being released into the wild.

From that first happening with us in 2018, through three exhibitions (IRL and online), and a publication, despite an unexpected and ongoing global pandemic, this completion of the Collider life cycle - subtitled A Reprise (The End), is a fitting metaphor for our times. The trees will continue to grow, and thrive. We will continue to grow, and thrive.

At the end, is anything ever really the end?

More information on the AirSpace Gallery website
https://www.airspacegallery.org/index.php/2020/project_entry/collider_part_4

COLLIDER Part 3 - the installation

Invitation to COLLIDER Part 3 at The Clinic, W1

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L-13 Light Industrial Workshop presents the 3rd and final part of Harry Adams’ COLLIDER Project:

A series of large scale ‘double vision’ screen-print paintings and studio grown oak saplings installed over three floors of an abandoned clinic in the heart of Mayfair, London.

19 – 27th June 2021
THE CLINIC, 56 Brook St, London W1
Opening times 12:30 – 6:00 pm daily

Post-Lockdown COLLIDER party
Friday 25th June
6 – 9 pm
RSVP: L-13@L-13.org

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Harry Adams' Victory Over The Sun

Come join us and celebrate
Harry Adams’
VICTORY OVER THE SUN

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Exhibition
Eagle Gallery
159 Farringdon Road, London EC1R 3AL

+

Open Studio
L-13 Light Industrial Workshop
31 Eyre Street Hill, London EC1R 5EW

Private View Thursday 11th July
At Eagle Gallery between 6:30-8:30pm
At L-13 between 7:30-9:30pm

All welcome, no RSVP necessary


With the title taken from the crazed 1913 Futurist Opera for which Kazimir Malevich made his first Black Square painting, the exhibition features new paintings and monotype silkscreens that continue Harry Adams' musings on apocalyptic romanticism.


Sun you bore the passions
And scorched them with flaming beam
We’ll yank a dusty coverlet over you
Lock you up in a concrete house!

Exhibition continues
12th July - 9th August 2019

L-13 studio visits by appointment

L-13@L-13.org

Invitation to Private View at Eagle Gallery this Wednesday

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Harry Adams are showing in an exhibition of hand-made prints at The Eagle Gallery, Wednesday 27th March

You are warmly invited to an exhibition of hand-printed works at
the Eagle Gallery, which includes five prints specially selected from the Harry Adams Dark Waters Rising screen print edition.

Eagle Gallery
159 Farringdon Road
London
EC1R 3AL
www.emmahilleagle.com

Private View
27th March
6:30 – 8:30 pm

Exhibition continues until 20th April.

PLUS
Harry Adams are working towards a new solo exhibition opening at Eagle Gallery, July 2019.

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+++SAVE THE DATES+++
New Work and Exhibitions

Harry Adams
5 – 7th April 
MIART fair, Milan with Galleria Alessandra Bonomo
www.miart.it/en


3rd July
Solo exhibition at Eagle Gallery, London
www.emmahilleagle.com

Harry Adams Exhibition Opening at AirSpace Gallery Saturday 28th April

+++OPENING SOON+++

Nothing Remains Unchanged But The Clouds
HARRY ADAMS
at
AirSpace Gallery
Stoke-on-Trent
28th April - 2nd June
OPENING PREVIEW
And Artist Talk With Harry Adams
Saturday 28th April 2pm-5pm*


An exhibition of paintings vs trees (and strategies in art avoidance). 

ON THE OPENING DAY

EDITION OF 31 OAK SAPLINGS
IN ARTIST MADE POTS
AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION


+++PLUS+++

WITNESS THE GREAT MANGéL PRESS
IN ACTION ON SITE
PRINTING THE NEW HARRY ADAMS
LIMITED EDITION WOODCUT
 

AirSpace Gallery
4 Broad Street, City Centre, Stoke-on-Trent, ST1 4HL

Open during exhibitions
Thursday to Saturday 11:00am to 5:00pm
Tuesdays and Wednesdays by appointment
www.airspacegallery.org

*Trains to Stoke-On-Trent from London Euston take between 1.5-2hrs and tickets are available from £18.00 return. Don't miss this unique opportunity to enjoy PAINTINGS, POTTERY AND PLANTS beyond the sanctum of the metropolitan elite!

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Nothing Remains... Exhibition Preview by Harold Rosenbloom

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Nothing Remains Unchanged But The Clouds

28th April - 2nd June 2018
AirSpace Gallery, 4 Broad Street, City Centre, Stoke-on-Trent, ST1 4HL
www.airspacegallery.org

A generation that had gone to school on a horse-drawn streetcar now stood under the open sky in a countryside in which nothing remained unchanged but the clouds, and beneath these clouds, in a field of force of destructive torrents and explosions, was the tiny, fragile human body.
Walter Benjamin, Illuminations: Essays and Reflections

“This is what you shall do; Love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to everyone that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labour to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men, go freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families, read these leaves in the open air every season of every year of your life, re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency not only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body.
Walt Whitman, from the introduction to the first edition of Leaves of Grass

Our work may look like it’s confused and conflicted, but it is in fact a highly controlled poetic outpouring”² 
Harry Adams

L-13 …. Like the mind of a man about to ride into battle with the heart of a child at play” 
Anon

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Harry Adams³ and the L-13 Light Industrial Workshop⁴ has a spirited and highly dynamic LOVE/hate hate hate HATE/love relationship with Art and the Art World.
Over the past 30 years as practising artists Steve Lowe and Adam Wood (aka Harry Adams) have developed strategies to enable themselves to function with creative freedom and, to the best of their ability, avoid what they consider the restrictive, prescriptive and destructive norms of contemporary art practice. An art orthodoxy they see as rendered near impotent and lacking in the elemental primacy, spiritual power or search for meaning that informed the high arts of past ages, or the critical/moral outrage and courage that informed the fights and challenges against dominant culture in the avant-garde movements of the modernist era.

Taking up Duchamp’s mantel as “anartists” they position themselves not so much as opposed to art, but as artists despite it. Unlike Duchamp who abandoned painting (then the mainstay of the elitist art world) in 1923 to develop a radical language of non-art in a reinvention of what art could do or might be in the modern age, Harry Adams refuses the corrupted and recouped version of his defiant strategies (now the de-toothed and sanctioned mainstay of the elitist art world) to develop a romantic vision of the unruly and reactionary painter as the true radical for what they describe as our “post-art” times. They embrace Duchamp’s despised retinal art⁵, now that serious retinal art is scarce and distrusted. This time not as egocentric ‘lone genius’ art, but with a commitment to collective creation, collaboration and the wish to stimulate a passionate community of spirit. That said, they don’t mind others playing the contemporary art games of the mind, they just find it a bit boring. They understand that some children like to play chess and engage in other tactical or academic pursuits, but these ones grew up playing on old bomb sites and in muddy streams, firing catapults and throwing sticks at passers-by. They are doers, they want to go places for real – to explore, not discuss going, or deal in notions of going. 
The clinical corridors of the analytical art maze are not for them. They have a metaphorical bulldozer for such things.

As such, Nothing Remains Unchanged but the Clouds is simply an exhibition of what they love to do: Painting and making stuff… and gleefully enjoying the critical difficulty such base pursuits might cause to those on the cutting edge of contemporary art practice. After all, painting (in its simple glory) can be difficult to quantify in the current cultural climate as an effective contribution to the complex socio-political debates and explorations that a serious contemporary “radical” artist must engage in. As Jeremy Deller said on winning the Turner Prize “Artists don’t paint these days, just as we don’t go to work on a horse.” Painting can be too easily dismissed as an old-fashioned bourgeois, indulgent and romantic activity that lacks relevance to today’s critical dialogues. This is all true and, as previously mooted, that is why Harry Adams is a painter. Harry Adams paints because he is in love with painting, its shifting sands of uselessness, and the lack of comprehension it provokes in those that might dismiss it as a retrograde art form lacking the rigour of concept led art.

Harry Adams sees the radical potential of painting as poetic and unquantifiable in our algorithmic mediated world. They are endlessly curious, thrilled and frustrated by it - consumed by the challenges, the joy, and the disappointment it brings. They are the savage from Brave New World, the spanner in the works for the likes of Cambridge Analytica. They want to know what a good painting for our time would look like if they were able to make one. They paint because they want to make beautiful, evocative and terrible things that people can fall in love with or find appalling. They keep on trying. This exhibition is evidence of their most recent efforts, for better or worse.

So here, presented by Harry Adams, are paintings of an imagined flat empty landscape with big chaotic skies (or is it just paint?): The Dereliction Series made. Also, more traditional landscapes with “real” fields and hills and trees. These works are tactile and made of stuff (oil paint and oil mediums, beeswax encaustic, gesso, cotton dust sheets, hessian, charcoal and plywood), tangible in their combination of illusion and materiality and smell – mineral, wholesome and toxic. Also present are works showing curious religious imagery or animals, and reference to paintings of the distant past. These paintings, big and small, may contain personal meaning that no one will get or care about, but it is all of beauty and confusion; and glory in a lack of clarity or intent that leaves them open to poetic interpretation. 

Paintings Vs Trees

Then, posed as a challenge, or to compliment these imaginated painted worlds are the real trees: an edition of little oak saplings planted in ceramic pots made here in Stoke by Harry Adams with the help of local ceramicist Joanne Ayre at the old Spode Works. This is their first attempt at pottery and all 31 pots were made over four days of frenzied activity. Two days of throwing (and learning) then two days of glazing (and learning). Harry Adams is not a master potter, the pots are inconsistent, warped and imperfect - the trees are small and delicate.

And then we have other things produced through the L-13 Light Industrial Workshop: the home of Harry Adams, their day job. Editions, publications and projects they devise and make with or for a small group of other artists they’ve worked with over the years. Artists that have all influenced them and provided an anchored point from which they can develop their own practice: namely (amongst others) Jimmy Cauty, Billy Childish, Neal Jones and Jamie Reid. 

Through all this energised activity they recognise and honour the special necessity of collective human creativity and its holistic power. To this end subscribing to a vision of making, doing, sharing and communing with those who seek or wish to make, do, share and commune with them. All done with the devilishly playful glee of those content with their self-validated freedom.
Harold Rosenbloom, January 2018

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¹Formally known as the fine arts. (i.e. arts with no functional purpose or value)
²Harry Adams has since confessed that the “highly controlled” part of this statement is in fact a lie.
³Harry Adams is the pseudonym used to present the collaborative work of Steve Lowe and Adam Wood. They have collaborated together on various visual, conceptual and music related projects since they met at art school in the late 1980’s and adopted the name Harry Adams in 2007 specifically for the purpose of making paintings.
⁴The L-13 Light Industrial Workshop and Private Ladies and Gentlemen’s Club for Art, Leisure and the Disruptive Betterment of Culture is an organisation founded by Steve Lowe (with the help of Adam) that provides a creative platform for the development and dissemination of work by a small group of artists he has found himself working with since 2003.
⁵Essentially, ‘visual/aesthetic’ rather than ‘idea’ based art.

Harry Adams Exhibition at AirSpace Gallery

Nothing Remains Unchanged But The Clouds

28th April - 2nd June 2018
AirSpace Gallery, 4 Broad Street, City Centre, Stoke-on-Trent, ST1 4HL
www.airspacegallery.org

An exhibition of paintings vs trees (and strategies in art avoidance) that seeks to degrade, debunk, re-mystify and re-purpose the useless arts in a post-art culture. 

AirSpace Gallery presents a set of brand new landscape paintings by artist duo Harry Adams, made in direct response to Stoke-on-Trent. Stripped of their figurative content, each painting is accompanied by its errant tree forms, escaping from their 2d plane and inhabiting the Gallery, planted in bespoke ceramic vessels - made by the artists, by hand, in the city of Stoke-On-Trent.