Unravelling the Western gaze of nature: artist Bryony Benge-Abbott’s captivating exhibition

SPIRIT: Bryony Benge-Abbott

ANIMA, LATIN for life force, soul, spirit, is the first solo exhibition of British Trinidadian artist Bryony Benge-Abbott.

Campbell’s Art Gallery introduces her vibrant paintings, drawings & textiles in this show, inviting us into worlds within worlds where the artist delights in and grapples with the sensation of losing and finding oneself in nature.

Rich portals to ancestral lands layered with memory and folklore meet fleeting encounters with light, sound and motion. Tangled roots, lush mosses and delicate lichens draw us into landscapes where glimpses of abstracted figures dance through veils of colour and pattern.

In her paintings, Benge-Abbott searches beyond the everyday to make contact with the overlapping, dynamic forces of life. Her most recent works were made in light of our collective experiences of climate change and the pandemic, and her personal loss of both parents.

They ask not how to resist change but instead seek to understand what is in us that cannot be destroyed, finding
grounding and anima in nature.

Bryony Benge-Abbott works in painting, drawing, street art, textiles and installation. She has a background curating science and social history exhibitions, which has shaped a creative practice that considers multiple dimensions to the ways in which we relate to nature, exploring the entangled space where art, science and spirituality meet.

Over the past six years, Benge-Abbott has worked with world-leading scientists in biomedical research and ecology on numerous public art projects as both artist and curator, and has exhibited her street art and textile designs internationally.

Anima will be her first solo exhibition. Her murals can be found in England, Tobago and Greece, she leads guided ‘wild drawing’ walks across south east England and in 2019 her commitment to community engagement through street art was acknowledged by the Mayor of London, who highlighted Benge-Abbott as a ‘hidden credit to the city’ as part of International Women’s Day celebrations.

Benge-Abbott recently established and led the exhibitions programme at the UK’s largest lab, The Francis Crick Institute, where she curated the 2018 exhibition Deconstructing Patterns: Art and Science in Conversation.

Since leaving this role, she has spent the past two years developing a new body of work to be exhibited together for the first time in this inaugural solo show.

Many of the works in Anima have been inspired by recent commissions with, for example, social scientists at British Ecological Society, ecologists at Grantham Institute – Climate Change and the Environment, environmental historians at the University of Liverpool and landscape architects at LDA Design.

Street art projects with community groups in collaboration with organisations such as Somerset NHS Foundation, Octopus Energy and St Mungo’s have also informed her latest body of work.

As her public art develops, Benge-Abbott’s studio paintings are becoming ever-more spatial and dynamic, built in layers of oil, spray paint, acrylic, pencil, ink, resin, paper, glass and textile, and drawing on folklore, mythology and somatic movement.

Benge-Abbott immerses herself in the landscapes she paints, curious about how we can deepen feelings of belonging to something bigger and richer than human-defined labels allow.

Her vibrant palette and layering of patterns play with the sensation of losing / finding ones self in the wild; figures and fragments of meaning and memory dissolve into and emerge from the land, unravelling the Western gaze of nature as ‘Other’ or as something to be tamed or owned.

Ritual and ancestral memories meet cultural and political histories, and are combined with an increasingly embodied approach to mark-making, developed during a research residency at Orleans House Gallery last year. 

Campbell’s Art Gallery began crafting handmade quality frames and dealing art in 1966, founded by Sir John Campbell Orde, who established the first store on Walton Street in Knightsbridge.

Today the gallery is still in the area, located in the museum district of South Kensington, and is best described as both the presentation, protection, and preservation of fine arts and a platform where artists and collectors come together.

The gallery is a 2 minute walk from South Kensington tube station at 35 Thurloe Place, SW7 2HP. Opening hours 11am – 7pm, closed Mondays

Anima, the first solo show of Bryony Benge-Abbott opens at Campbell’s Art Gallery – 21 April – 5 May 2022

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