George Taylor British, b. 1975
54 x 58 1/8 x 3 3/8 in
Born in Macclesfield in 1975, George Taylor moved at the age of 10 onto the farm set within its own steep-sided secluded valley in a remote part of Gloucestershire. Here she began working with her father as he tended livestock and managed the woodland, initiating what has been a lifelong enchantment with the natural world especially as a creative environment beyond landscape solely as a leisure destination – more as a site from to engage with contemporary issues such as embodied experience in place.
At Bretton Hall, University of Leeds, she experimented with sculptural form and constructed environments, introduced by tutor John Penny to the work of Minimalism and Land artists such as Walter de Maria. Indeed the latter’s ‘Lightning Field’, 1977, prompted her to install six 30-foot steel poles in the small lake in the valley. Yet her urge to form a new creative language, as she says “Donald Judd meets Meret Oppenheim”, which could speak of the daily reality of life and death in farming, particularly at lambing and calving time, drove her to work with the residual materials of living forms, animal skins such as goat or snake, then ultimately feathers.
Her current body of work emerged in 2013 from a little sculptural sketch that she felt compelled to make on re-reading Georges Bataille’s ‘The Story of the Eye’, where she glued five blown quail’s eggs, originally destined for lunch, to an old satellite dish in a perfunctory yet deliberate hexagonal pattern. As she scaled up the pattern onto four foot discs, the relation between the intricate complexity of each egg’s surface and its bare pale interior sparked in her mind a passage from Luce Irigary’s text ‘Elemental Passions’ that refers to the open exchange of the kiss, ‘But when lips kiss, openness is not the opposite of closure. Closed lips remain open. And their touching allows movement from inside to outside, from outside to in, with no fastening nor opening of the mouth to stop the exchange.’ The lips are as a moebius strip where inside and outside surface combine, interchange and replace one another in an erotic dance that evokes the play of presence and absence of life and death. Taylor then embarked on the gesture of ‘softening the hard-edges of Minimalism’ by taking seminal Bridget Riley Op Art compositions that suggest this open folding in and out, overlaying the graphic design with the variegated hues and exotic texture of feathers, as both homage and gauntlet.
Taylor’s work is in various collections, including the Groucho Club, Murder Me and Pangolin Editions
.
Provenance
From the artist
Exhibitions
George Taylor: Intimate Immensity, 2018; Masterpiece London 2016;
Literature
George Taylor: Intimate Immensity, 2018, PL
Publications
George Taylor: Intimate Immensity, 2018, PL