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12 December 2024
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Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
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Jonathan Owen
British, born 1973
Untitled
,
2021
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Jonathan Owen
Untitled
, 2021
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
Zoom
Medium
Sculpture, 19th century marble figure with additional carving
Size
225 x 122 x 101 cm. (88.6 x 48 x 39.8 in.)
Price
Price on Request
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Ingleby Gallery
Edinburgh
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About this Artwork
Movement
Contemporary Art
Exhibitions
05/29/2021–07/17/2021 Jonathan Owen
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Description
Jonathan Owen is best known for his interventions into ‘found’ antique sculptures, a process of re-carving and reinventing defunct marble statuary in an attempt - as he puts it - “to subvert and puncture this familiar rhetoric, and so to reactivate the object through transformation rather than destruction, to make a new proposition.”
This approach offers a way of working that seems especially relevant at the present moment (as the conversation around public monuments is so vigorously reconsidered and rephrased) questioning ideas of permanence and power, attributes so often associated with the original sculptures that are his favoured raw material.
The exhibition includes dramatically re-worked busts of once powerful men, but at its centre there is a major new sculpture based on a life-size, allegorical figure of Navigation, a figure that formerly stood proud as a symbol of empire and exploration - sextant and rudder at the ready - reduced to a pile of interlinking chains snaking across its plinth on the gallery floor.
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