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Hales Gallery: Dant on Drink: Drawings about Drinking in Britain - 25 Nov 2010 to 8 Jan 2011

Current Exhibition


25 Nov 2010 to 8 Jan 2011
Wednesday - Saturday, 11am - 6pm or by appointment
Hales Gallery
Tea Building
7 Bethnal Green Road
E1 6LA
London
United Kingdom
Europe
p: +44 (0) 20 7033 1938
m:
f: +44 (0) 20 7033 1939
w: www.halesgallery.com











ADAM DANT
Royal Drinking (detail), 2010, ink and photographs on paper, 238.8 x 182.9 cm
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Artists in this exhibition: ADAM DANT


ADAM DANT

Dant on Drink: Drawings about Drinking in Britain

Private view: 24 November, 6-9pm
25 November - 8 January 2011



Hales Gallery is pleased to announce Adam Dant's second solo show at the gallery, Dant on Drink: Drawings about Drinking in Britain.

Dant makes lavish and richly layered drawings which take the viewer on an inventive and imaginative visual journey. His subjects are always meticulously researched and the resulting works take many forms including maps, charts and visual allegories. The elaborate scenes he depicts are often located in recognisable spaces, places and institutions.

In four large narrative tableaux, Dant depicts the politics, language, history and environment of the nation's very particular relationship with 'the bottle', exploring the way in which the news media use representations of contemporary 'Binge Drinking Britain' as a convenient vessel to be filled with the wider themes of social improvement and change, political progress and the general health of the nation.

The seemingly dense and sprawling visual narrative of Dant's work often belies the carefully considered structure beneath. A flowchart linking the various historical figures and drinks logos in his drawing, The Fight between Temperance and Liquor, underpins this boisterous scene much in the same way that generations of received ideas, common history and hidden national neuroses may well lie beneath the media's image of 'Binge Britain'. The Fight between Temperance and Liquor also transforms and modifies its real location, Walsall Town Centre, in such a manner that the whole scene becomes a contemporary reworking of Bruegel's 1559 painting The Battle between Carnival and Lent. Amongst recognisable landmarks such as the statue of 'Sister Dora' and the town's much loved hippo sculpture, birds, beasts and characters from alcoholic drinks labels battle with the protagonists of the temperance movement. A flock of 'Famous Grouse' boldly peck away at 'The Band of Hope' whilst the 'Babycham' bambi cruelly de-bags Margaret Bright-Lucas (1818-1890), president of 'The British Women's Temperance Association'.

The sepia ink drawing British Drinking depicts the chaotic and Bruegelesque 'booze-fests' that regularly take place on the streets outside the artist's studio in Shoreditch, London. Whilst showing all variety of excess and diversion, this panorama of inebriation constitutes an extensive glossary of figures of speech used to describe states of drunkenness. Revelers are depicted literally 'trolleyed', 'trashed' and 'snookered' whilst others enact more antiquated synonyms as with the gentleman who has 'seen the French King' or another who is 'bit by a barn weasel'.

Royal Drinking catalogues the traditional attachment of the British royal line to alcohol. A grand procession passes before a view of Buckingham Palace draped with the logos of the many drinks brands who boast royal approval. The parade stretches from William the Conqueror and his alcohol only diet to the young princes, William and Harry, and their preferred tipple, the 'the crack baby' cocktail. The parade of bibulous monarchs wends its way around a fountain filled with 'empties' overseen by a statue of Queen Victoria who is depicted as an enormous female Bacchus.

The title of the drawing Bread and Circuses refers to the Ancient Roman political tool whereby the common man is made passive and unaware of his civic duty by the 'consolations' of both. The pitched auditorium of the coliseum contains a chronology of British repositories of alcoholic drink from Tavern to Tesco. Unlike the other 3 drawings in this overview of British drinking culture, the arena here is empty of drinkers suggesting prohibition, the aftermath of some form of booze apocalypse or that the joyful and wanton transience offered by the hop and the grape will be eternally providing of a fleeting escape from the rubble of history.

Dant's drawings can be found in numerous public and private collections including The Arts Council Collection, Tate, The V&A;, MoMA, New York, Deutsche Bank, The Museum of London, The Government Art Collection, The Musee d'Art Contemporain, Lyon and San Diego Museum of Art.

A 56 page illustrated catalogue 'Dant on Drink', published by The New Art Gallery Walsall will be available at the gallery during the show.



For further information and images please visit www.halesgallery.com or contact Hales Gallery on 0044 (0)20 7033 1938 or [email protected].



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