Susie MacMurray British, b. 1959
Gathering, 2019
Silk velvet and barbed wire
190 x 70 x 55 cm
74 3/4 x 27 1/2 x 21 5/8 in
74 3/4 x 27 1/2 x 21 5/8 in
Unique
Further images
This stunning work by artist Susie MacMurray relates to a significant public commission that was unveiled at Tatton Park Mansion’s grand Staircase and remained on display throughout the summer of...
This stunning work by artist Susie MacMurray relates to a significant public commission that was unveiled at Tatton Park Mansion’s grand Staircase and remained on display throughout the summer of 2019. The extraordinary installation on behalf of East Cheshire Hospice represented the vulnerability and resilience of humanity and was inspired by the Mansion's impressive history and architecture.
MacMurray is known for her large-scale immersive installations that combine meticulous detail with a sense of spectacle and drama. Gathering is no different. Thousands of individual elements of red velvet and barbed wire were suspended in the grand rotunda to create a performative space that draws you in. Inspired by the history and architecture, the artist said:
“In 1897 a grand costume ball was held at Tatton - a gathering, theatrical and wildly extravagant. I was drawn immediately to the architecture of the staircase hall, with its circular cut out landing hovering halfway between the ground floor below and the cupola high above. I imagined leaning on the railing with a birds-eye view of the attendees, bedecked in their velvet finery, promenading below. Architecturally the space invites the work to cascade through the void like Spanish moss. Gathering is voluptuous but wounded. I also found a curious resonance between this in-between space and the idea of hospice."
Pangolin London is delighted to represent Susie MacMurray.
MacMurray is known for her large-scale immersive installations that combine meticulous detail with a sense of spectacle and drama. Gathering is no different. Thousands of individual elements of red velvet and barbed wire were suspended in the grand rotunda to create a performative space that draws you in. Inspired by the history and architecture, the artist said:
“In 1897 a grand costume ball was held at Tatton - a gathering, theatrical and wildly extravagant. I was drawn immediately to the architecture of the staircase hall, with its circular cut out landing hovering halfway between the ground floor below and the cupola high above. I imagined leaning on the railing with a birds-eye view of the attendees, bedecked in their velvet finery, promenading below. Architecturally the space invites the work to cascade through the void like Spanish moss. Gathering is voluptuous but wounded. I also found a curious resonance between this in-between space and the idea of hospice."
Pangolin London is delighted to represent Susie MacMurray.
Provenance
From the artist.Exhibitions
Susie MacMurray, Murmur, Pangolin London, 2020Join our mailing list
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