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Dickon Drury: An Egg In Your Shoe

Past exhibition
16 September - 28 October 2023
  • Overview
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Press
Overview
Dickon Drury, An Egg In Your Shoe

Shulamit Nazarian is pleased to announce the opening of An Egg in Your Shoe, the gallery’s first solo exhibition by UK-based painter Dickon Drury. The artist’s thematically rich, meticulously detailed paintings mine diverse corners of art history and the genre of still-life painting to delve into themes of self-sufficiency, preservation, and regeneration with tenderness and humor.

 

Drury's latest series of oil paintings on linen invites viewers to contemplate the complex relationship between material possessions and a sense of home amid an uncertain future. The still lives present collections of objects that work like visual puzzles, prodding the viewer to piece together clues about the mysterious inhabitants of these scenes. Drury's practice seeks the humor and idiosyncrasy embodied in our selection of material possessions, and his research has often looked to the supplies collected by apocalypse preppers. Boxes in the process of being packed or unpacked evoke a sense of urgency and an impending move, while rolls of bubble wrap allude to themes of protection and value for one's beloved objects. The compositions present their diverse groupings of objects democratically, without a hierarchical division between a whistle, a lighter, or a high-end ceramic vase. Without a human figure in sight, Drury's paintings offer an imaginative narrative played out in the background by the invisible, implicit inhabitants of his eccentric world.

 

The title of the exhibition references the whimsical threat, "Put an egg in your shoe and beat it." This absurdist declaration also poses the question, how might it actually feel to walk with an egg in your shoe? An off-kilter sense of space and a diffuse feeling of disorientation pervade the tablescapes and bookshelves of Drury's works, which he depicts as if viewed from many angles at once. The punning title also alludes to the objects and shapes that suggest multiple meanings in Drury's compositions. In another sense, we might think of the many "easter eggs" that appear to discerning viewers of these paintings, such as cleverly rendered art historical references, hidden optical illusions, and tongue-in-cheek visual jokes.

 

This exhibition marks the artist's first body of work created in his new studio in Cornwall, a coastal, Southwestern county in England, where a tidal creek flows just beyond his windows. The gentle, reflected light has softened the artist's saturated color palette somewhat and infused many of the works with rich blues. Drury's watery surroundings, as well as his interest in analogous forms and referential images, are emblematized in the painting A River Ain't Too Much to Love. Here, the roaring water depicted in a perfect miniature reproduction of early twentieth-century artist Marsden Hartley's Smelt Brook Falls echoes across an array of plastic water bottles, tinned fish, and ocean scenes on product packaging. The upper portion of the painting depicts a ceramic teapot inspired by the classic British potter Bernard Leach adorned with the image of a well. For Drury, the well motif is symbolic of the processes of introspection and gathering inspiration, but also signifies hopes for self-sufficiency as our climate crisis causes freshwater levels to drop across the globe.

 

Throughout Drury's recent paintings, the eclectic throng of objects—from packaged foods and condiments, to solitary earbuds, seashells, and snails, to first aid supplies and batteries made from fruit—is suggestive of our sense of precarity in a world colored by global pandemics, political instability, and environmental catastrophe. Snails became a prominent motif in Drury's work during lockdown as a signifier of our collective retreat into the safety of our shells. Another pervasive image throughout the works is a slender apple core, which, on closer inspection, reveals two faces shaped by the fruit's negative space. The apple core is inspired by Danish psychologist Edgar Rubin's classic optical illusion, known as the "Rubin Vase," in which an image of a vase that produces two faces confuses our perception of figure-ground relations. The ambiguous relationship between figure and ground embedded in the apple speaks to the larger sense of personality evoked by these scenes of strangely evocative objects. In a world in which we are confined to our domestic spaces more and more, perhaps our sense of self begins to blur with the contents of our homes, and still lives become portraits.

 


 

 

Dickon Drury (b. 1986, Salisbury) lives and works in Cornwall. He is a graduate of the Slade School of Fine Art and a recipient of the Slade School of Fine Art, Desiree Painting Prize (2016). Recent solo exhibitions include: If you see me then weep, Galleri Opdhal, Stavanger, (2023); Time Flies Like an Arrow, Fruit Flies Like a Banana, Kendall Koppe, Glasgow (2021); Dickon Drury, Condo London, Koppe Astner at Carlos Ishikwa, London (2020); To Be The Key, Galleri Opdhal, Stavanger (2019); Art Review Asia Xian Chang section at Westbund, with Koppe Astner, Shanghai (2018); Tennis Elbow, The Journal Gallery, New York (2018); Holed Up, Galleri Opdhal, Stavanger (2018); If The Sea Was Whiskey, Frutta Gallery, Rome (2017); The Who‘s Who of Whos, Koppe Astner, Glasgow (2016); Optics Don‘t Make Marks, Spike Island Project Space, Bristol. Selected group exhibitions include: Midnight Murmurs, Shulamit Nazarian, Los Angeles (2022); My Kid Could’ve Done That!, The Edge, Bath (2021); Generation Y, Platform Foundation, London (2019); A New Kitchen Sink, Josh Lilley, London (2017).

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Works
  • Dickon Drury A River Ain’t Too Much to Love, 2023 Oil on Flax 70 ¾ x 47 ¼ in 180 x 120 cm
    Dickon Drury
    A River Ain’t Too Much to Love, 2023
    Oil on Flax
    70 ¾ x 47 ¼ in
    180 x 120 cm
  • Dickon Drury Ants carry Fruit Battery, 2023 Oil on Cotton 12 x 22 in 30.5 x 56 cm
    Dickon Drury
    Ants carry Fruit Battery, 2023
    Oil on Cotton
    12 x 22 in
    30.5 x 56 cm
  • Dickon Drury Flowers for Alfred Wallis, 2023 Oil on Flax 70 ¾ x 47 ¼ in 180 x 120 cm
    Dickon Drury
    Flowers for Alfred Wallis, 2023
    Oil on Flax
    70 ¾ x 47 ¼ in
    180 x 120 cm
  • Dickon Drury Put an egg in your shoe and beat it, 2023 Oil on Flax 67 x 47 ¼ in 170 x 120 cm
    Dickon Drury
    Put an egg in your shoe and beat it, 2023
    Oil on Flax
    67 x 47 ¼ in
    170 x 120 cm
  • Dickon Drury Ants carry Pumpkin, 2023 Oil on Flax 12 x 22 in 30.5 x 56 cm
    Dickon Drury
    Ants carry Pumpkin, 2023
    Oil on Flax
    12 x 22 in
    30.5 x 56 cm
  • Dickon Drury Worm Food, 2023 Oil on Flax 63 x 47 ¼ in 160 x 120 cm
    Dickon Drury
    Worm Food, 2023
    Oil on Flax
    63 x 47 ¼ in
    160 x 120 cm
Installation Views
  • Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
    Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
  • Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
    Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
  • Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
    Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
  • Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
    Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
  • Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
    Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
  • Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
    Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16 – October 28, 2023.
Press
  • Dickon Drury: An Egg in Your Shoe, September 16–October 28, 2023. Shulamit Nazarian, Los Angeles. Photo: Ed Mumford.

    Autre: Dickon Drury Mines Diverse Corners of Still-Life Painting In “An Egg In Your Shoe” @ Shulamit Nazarian

    Autre, October 2, 2023
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Nazarian / Curcio

616 N La Brea Ave

Los Angeles, CA 90036

info@nazariancurcio.com

310.281.0961

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