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STEPHEN CHAMBERS: THE COURT OF REDONDA – Hastings Contemporary

Past exhibition
10 December 2020 - 9 May 2021
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STEPHEN CHAMBERS, THE COURT OF REDONDA – Hastings Contemporary
Hastings Contemporary
Galleries 3 - 7
Rock-A-Nore Rd, Hastings TN34 3DW, United Kingdom

 


Stephen
 Chambers’ The Court of Redonda will mark the re-opening of Hastings Contemporary after the UK’s latest national lockdown.

 

First shown at The Venice Biennale in 2017, Stephen Chambers’ The Court of Redonda depicts a cast of 101 imaginary courtiers inspired by a literary legend that developed around the tiny uninhabited Caribbean island of Redonda. This legend took shape as a fantasy in the mind of Matthew Dowdy Sheill, a merchant trader who claimed the island in 1865 and gave himself the title of King. The title passed down to his son, who decided that it should be given to poets and novelists as a form of literary honour. The celebrated novelist Javier Marías was a recent sovereign and his appointment of courtiers, including film director Pedro Almodóvar and novelists AS Byatt and Ian McEwan, inspired Chambers to create his own imaginary court of Redondan's: not just poets, philosophers, artists and writers, but also patients, pharmacists, harlots and “bums”.

 

Chambers explains: ‘It’s a construct, - an idea that I was intrigued with. I wrote to Javier Marías, and in that correspondence, I suggested that I would paint portraits of the court. The paintings are not portraits from life, and they’re not depictions of real people, -they are invented. I wanted to present a wide range of motley ne’er-do-wells and in a way celebrate their ordinariness. There is that line that I kick around my head which goes ‘the ordinary is more extraordinary than the extraordinary’’.

 

The Court of Redonda is joined in this exhibition by other series of works by Chambers exploring histories, both real and imagined.

 

Casanova follows the life and loves of the eponymous figure, filling the gaps between his young adulthood and his renown whereas Trouble Meets Trouble depicts twenty characters who, through living in differing eras or locations, residing in the pages of books or existing in mythology, could never in fact meet.

 

Chambers explains: “I tend to work in chapters and I create paintings by taking an idea and then resolving it. The characters in these works are real people, whose personalities and thoughts interest me. I like the paintings to be beautiful, …but not necessarily the people to be beautiful. As an artist I am interested in the process of painting, (creating works) but suspicious of virtuosity.”

 

Lastly, the most recent series I Bite & Sting, made during the pandemic, is Chambers’ personal riposte to the toil and the strains of our current times and is described by the artist as ‘an affirmative, jocular growl at those things which block our path.’

 

Stephen Chambers RA is one of the UK’s most revered artists, having exhibited widely around the globe, with more than 40 solo presentations including the Royal Academy of Arts in London in 2012 and at the Pera Museum, Istanbul in 2014. Chambers contemporary dance collaborations at The Royal Ballet, London with Ashley Page and Orlando Gough include Sleeping with Audrey (1996), Room of Cooks (1997,1999), and This House will Burn (2001).

 

Chambers work is held in many international collections including Arts Council England, Deutsche Bank, London, Downing College, Cambridge (at which he was the Kettle’s Yard/Downing College Fellow and later elected an Honorary Fellow), UK Government Art Collection, London, Metropolitan Museum, New York and The Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

 

Book your ticket via their website HERE 

Opening hours; Friday - Sunday , 11am - 4pm

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  • Stephen Chambers

    Stephen Chambers

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Mason's Yard, London

7-8 Mason's Yard

London

SW1Y 6BU

Opening hours: 
Monday - Friday: 10am - 6pm

020 3624 0214

                            

      

Wellington Arch

Wellington Arch, Apsley Way

London

W1J 7JZ

Opening hours:
Wednesday - Sunday: 10am - 5pm (Last Entry 4:30pm)

Tickets via English Heritage

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