Winnebago, 2004, acrylic gouache on canvas, courtesy of the artist and Kate MacGarry, London

Exhibition

Thursday 24 January – Monday 18 March 2013

Winnebago, Carpets, Onsen, Potter by Peter McDonald

Daiwa Foundation Japan House, 13/14 Cornwall Terrace, Outer Circle, London, NW1 4PQ

Organised by the Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation

24  January 2013- 18 March 2013. Weekday late night opening until 8:00pm : 5 February, 21 February, 26 February, 28 February, 5 March, 7 March and 12 March.

Peter McDonald depicts colourful scenes inhabited by people engaged in everyday activities. Images of teachers, artists, hairdressers or carpet sellers are constructed with an elementary graphic language. By making use of archetypes, symbolism and our incorrigible tendency to make the strange seem more familiar, McDonald’s alternative world reads like a parallel universe.

The artist describes the exhibition as a view of his painted universe, showcasing his paintings and works on paper, revealing the influence of everyday experiences upon his practice. For example the diptych, Looking for a Carpet (2009) was based on an experience during a trip to Morocco. Some of the works on paper reflect his stay in Japan during and after his year-long project Visitor, in Kanazawa, whilst the Noh drama series of works were based on his memories of traditional theatre performances and collaborations with the Kanazawa Noh Museum during Visitor.

Peter McDonald was born in Tokyo in 1973, studying sculpture at Central Saint Martins School of Art and painting at the Royal Academy Schools. He has had solo exhibitions at Kate MacGarry, London and also at Gallery Side 2, Tokyo, amongst others. He was awarded the John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize (2008). Art on the Underground commissioned McDonald to produce Art for Everybody a large scale billboard installation at Southwark station (2009). As artist-in-residence at the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, Japan (2011–12), he worked on a year-long project called Visitor, which included workshops and work-in-progress shows. He recently worked with The Adachi Institute of Woodcut Prints to produce a woodcut print entitled Over There (2012).

 

 

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