Rebecca Stevenson

Born 1971, lives and works in London

Rebecca Stevenson

Born 1971, lives and works in London

Curriculum Vitae

1971 Born
1995 Filton College, Bristol / UK
BTEC Foundation in Art and Design
1998 Chhelsea College of Art and Design, London / UK
B.A. (Hons) Fine Art ( Sculpture),
2000 Royal College of Art, London / UK
M.A. Fine Art (Sculpture)

Grants and awards

Solo Exhibitions (selected)

2023 'In Transformation', V&A, London, UK
2022 'Delicate Pleasures / Zarte Freuden', Fasanenschlösschen Moritzburg, Germany
2020 'Bacchanale', James Freeman Gallery London, UK
2010 Fantasia, Kudlek van der Grinten Galerie, Cologne, Germany
2008 Tempting Nature, Mogadishni, Copenhagen, Denmark
2007 Innocents, Mogadishni, Copenhagen / Denmark
2005 Carniflora, Mogadishni, Copenhagen / Denmark
2001 Exquisite Corpse, DomoBaal, London, UK

Group Exhibitions (selected)

2023 TRÜFFELSUCHE, Kunstverein Wilhelmshöhe, Ettlingen, DE
'Symptom: Barock', together with Simone Demandt, Margret Eicher, Rebecca Stevenson, Myriam Thyes, Schloss Eutin, DE
2022 'Modern Baroque' (together with Daniel Hosego), James Freeman Gallery, London / UK
2021 'Grinling Gibbons: Centuries in the Making', (together with Phoebe Cummings, and Alexander McQueen), Bonhams, New Bond St, London, UK
Artists' Conquest': Interventions by Margret Eicher, Luzia Simons, Rebecca Stevenson and Myriam Thyes, Schloss Pillnitz, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, Germany
2019 'So Beautiful It Hurts', (together with Carolein Smit Andrew McIntosh), James Freeman Gallery, London, UK
B.A.R.O.C.K' (together with Margret Eicher, Luzia Simons, Myriam Thyes), MYRIAM THYES Schloss Caputh, Potsdam, Germany
2016 WALD, Van der Grinten Galerie, Cologne / DE
Petrichor, Bo Lee Gallery, London / UK
Decadents, James Freeman Gallery, London / UK
Rabenschwarz, Kunstverein Bamberg / DE
Love to Death, Leontia Gallery, London / UK
2015 Queensize – Female artists from the Olbricht Collection, me Collectors Room Berlin / DE
Queensize – Female artists from the Olbricht Collection, me Collectors Room Berlin / DE Lo Spirito del Lago, Spazio Luparia, Stresa / IT
2014 Das Obere des Körpers Galerie Frank Schlag, Essen / DE
2013 The Collective The House of St Barnabas, London / UK
In Dreams, Cob Gallery and Guts for Garters, London / UK
2012 East Wing X: Material Matters, Courtauld Institute of Art, London / UK
Highly Sensitive - Wax in Contemporary Art, Villa Rot, Burgrieden / DE
2011 Iconoclasts, Lloyds Club, London / UK
Wunderkammer, bo.lee Gallery, Bath / UK
Direction, Gallery B15, Copenhagen / DK
2010 Podium & Pandemonium, Nettie Horn, London / UK
2009 Go for it! (The Olbricht Collection-a sequel), Museum Weserburg, Bremen / DE
2008 Future 50, Project Space Leeds / UK
Whispers of Immortality, Natalia Goldin Gallery, Stockholm / SE
These Living Walls of Jet, Ceri Hand Gallery, Liverpool / UK
Group Show Mogadishni, Copenhagen / DK
The Clearing, Nettiehorn, London / UK
2006 Artsway Open Artsway, Hampshire / UK
Go Figure, Mogadishni, Aarhus / DK
Everything Must Go, VTO Gallery, London / UK
2004 Paradisiaco, DomoBaal, London / UK
Cardboard Factory, Mogadishni, Copenhagen / DK
2003 Entranced, VTO Gallery, London / UK
Open Sculpture, Royal West of England Academy / UK
Don't you forget about me, Studio Voltaire, London / UK
2002 Arcadia in the City, Marble Hill House, Twickenham / UK
New Classicism, Palazzo Forti, Verona / IT
Beautiful Projects, Ashley Gardens, London / UK
2001 Bittersweet, Danielle Arnaud, London / UK
What next from London?, Orion Gallery, Ostend / BE
2000 Assembly, Stepney City, London / UK
1997 Landscape, Moravian Burial Ground, London / UK
B.R.A.A.S., Frankfurt / DE
Minus 4, Fridge Gallery, London / UK
1994 Gang, Praxis Gallery, Bristol / UK

A Group Show

TRANSFORMATION: MATERIAL & DISSOLUTION

Wolfgang Flad, Fernando de Brito, Joseph Beuys, Rikako Kawauchi, Rebecca Stevenson, Lorenzo Pompa, Elger Esser, Robert Currie

June 17, 2023

 — 

August 5, 2023

As the title of the show suggests, the focus here is on the alchemical aspect of art. This could perhaps be described as a recharging action, by which lifeless, inconspicuous material is reborn as something precious, fascinating, powerful and unique, and this element then remains purposely perceptible in the work. Perhaps to provoke wonder, a moment to stop and take up the scent that brings the viewer into active dialogue with the work and its aura.

The exhibition ‘TRANSFORMATIONS: MATERIAL AND DISSOLUTION’ brings together works of 11 international artists in which the transformation of materials plays a role, often a fundamental one. Here we encounter matter in the form of: dust, wax, paper, nylon, epoxy, glass, mirrored glass, silver, ink, graphite and plaster.

Joseph Beuys (1921-1986) a major protagonist of the post-war avant-garde, Beuys is undisputedly among the most influential artists, whose understanding of material (also in the alchemical sense) went as far as the use of his own body. Here we present 6 very quiet, gentle frottage drawings that were made in the 50s in connection with his zinc relief „Vor der Geburt“ (Before the Birth).

The three-dimensional works of Japanese painter Rikako Kawauchi (*1990, lives in Tokyo) are made of flesh-colored serpentine structures cast in resin. They evoke organic entities that despite their utter abstraction exude an extreme realism.

Artist Wolfgang Flad (*1974, lives in Berlin) is represented with pieces from various work groups: abstract aluminum reliefs with a stark interplay between the shiny polished surface and the rough, pockmarked texture of the craters that blemish it to various degrees; colorful, reflective wall pieces from his ‘Dark Side of the Moon‘ cycle; and the latest works, large-format abstract tableaus with an uneven, sandy surface made of dust and sawdust collected from the floor of the artist’s studio, color-enhanced and transformed.

From a photographic template transferred in painting onto a collection of numerous thin, taught nylon threads, densely spaced yet offsetting each other, artist Robert Currie (*1976, lives in London) creates three-dimensional wall pieces that are visually extremely suggestive while appearing almost immaterial at the same time. His abstract works, on the other hand, evoke shadowy black mirrors.

Elger Esser (*1967, lives in Düsseldorf) here shows two small-format nightscapes, in which the black silhouettes of treetops are seen in the moonlight, outlined against the night sky. The special technique of direct pigment printing on silver-plated copper plates palpably communicates the magical atmosphere, as the eye roams the scene of darkest night, seeking orientation and a sense of space in the few light sources to be found.

The black and white photographs of Pierre Faure (*1965, lives in Paris) have a surprising extreme-yet- subtle alienation effect: with a flipped perspective, a skillfully chosen image edit and reduction of visual information down to purely geometric structures the perception of scaffolding is completely redefined.

Using more or less sharp objects, Fernando de Brito (*1956, lives in Hamburg), carves through the layers of oil and tempera built up on the MDF “canvas” to create paintings that are a mesh of lines. The principal of oscillation between clearly spaced straight vertical lines and freehand, dynamic horizontal lines seems to make each composition pulsate and allows it to breath.

Dutch artist Bas de Wit (*1977, lives in Maastricht) transforms casts of old art-historical sculptures, out of which he makes new, more rough-hewn castings, which he in turn then casts with colored layers of resin. This process leaves much room for deformation, by accident or design, resulting in newly created sculptures that are but a vague reminiscence of the original historical model, from which they have liberated themselves in stages, to assert their own existence in the end.

Wax, a flexible, user-friendly material, has been deployed widely throughout art history in the area of applied arts and for maquettes of planned sculptures. Rebecca Stevenson (*1971, lives in London), in contrast to the hyperrealism of the 60s or 90s, uses wax to sculpturally paraphrase the depiction of reality found in her poetic-macabre allegories.

The always intensely colorful figurative scenarios in the paintings of Lorenzo Pompa (*1962, lives in Düsseldorf) are joined at regular intervals, as if in an ongoing dialogue, by black-silver abstract works in which the oil paint is constrained in minimalistic gesture that depending on the size can become an almost unlimited textural field. This show presents the latest of these paintings.

Michael Wittassek (*1958, lives near Cologne), for his part, works mainly in the form of installation with sculptures of folded, crumpled sheets of exposed photographic paper. Here, however, we are showing mid-sized black, mirrored objects with a reflective convex surface that seems to suck in the surrounding space and even the viewers themselves.

We would like to thank the participating artists for their generous constructive input.

A Group Show

TRANSFORMATION: MATERIAL & DISSOLUTION

Wolfgang Flad, Fernando de Brito, Joseph Beuys, Rikako Kawauchi, Rebecca Stevenson, Lorenzo Pompa, Elger Esser, Robert Currie

June 17, 2023

 — 

August 5, 2023

As the title of the show suggests, the focus here is on the alchemical aspect of art. This could perhaps be described as a recharging action, by which lifeless, inconspicuous material is reborn as something precious, fascinating, powerful and unique, and this element then remains purposely perceptible in the work. Perhaps to provoke wonder, a moment to stop and take up the scent that brings the viewer into active dialogue with the work and its aura.

The exhibition ‘TRANSFORMATIONS: MATERIAL AND DISSOLUTION’ brings together works of 11 international artists in which the transformation of materials plays a role, often a fundamental one. Here we encounter matter in the form of: dust, wax, paper, nylon, epoxy, glass, mirrored glass, silver, ink, graphite and plaster.

Joseph Beuys (1921-1986) a major protagonist of the post-war avant-garde, Beuys is undisputedly among the most influential artists, whose understanding of material (also in the alchemical sense) went as far as the use of his own body. Here we present 6 very quiet, gentle frottage drawings that were made in the 50s in connection with his zinc relief „Vor der Geburt“ (Before the Birth).

The three-dimensional works of Japanese painter Rikako Kawauchi (*1990, lives in Tokyo) are made of flesh-colored serpentine structures cast in resin. They evoke organic entities that despite their utter abstraction exude an extreme realism.

Artist Wolfgang Flad (*1974, lives in Berlin) is represented with pieces from various work groups: abstract aluminum reliefs with a stark interplay between the shiny polished surface and the rough, pockmarked texture of the craters that blemish it to various degrees; colorful, reflective wall pieces from his ‘Dark Side of the Moon‘ cycle; and the latest works, large-format abstract tableaus with an uneven, sandy surface made of dust and sawdust collected from the floor of the artist’s studio, color-enhanced and transformed.

From a photographic template transferred in painting onto a collection of numerous thin, taught nylon threads, densely spaced yet offsetting each other, artist Robert Currie (*1976, lives in London) creates three-dimensional wall pieces that are visually extremely suggestive while appearing almost immaterial at the same time. His abstract works, on the other hand, evoke shadowy black mirrors.

Elger Esser (*1967, lives in Düsseldorf) here shows two small-format nightscapes, in which the black silhouettes of treetops are seen in the moonlight, outlined against the night sky. The special technique of direct pigment printing on silver-plated copper plates palpably communicates the magical atmosphere, as the eye roams the scene of darkest night, seeking orientation and a sense of space in the few light sources to be found.

The black and white photographs of Pierre Faure (*1965, lives in Paris) have a surprising extreme-yet- subtle alienation effect: with a flipped perspective, a skillfully chosen image edit and reduction of visual information down to purely geometric structures the perception of scaffolding is completely redefined.

Using more or less sharp objects, Fernando de Brito (*1956, lives in Hamburg), carves through the layers of oil and tempera built up on the MDF “canvas” to create paintings that are a mesh of lines. The principal of oscillation between clearly spaced straight vertical lines and freehand, dynamic horizontal lines seems to make each composition pulsate and allows it to breath.

Dutch artist Bas de Wit (*1977, lives in Maastricht) transforms casts of old art-historical sculptures, out of which he makes new, more rough-hewn castings, which he in turn then casts with colored layers of resin. This process leaves much room for deformation, by accident or design, resulting in newly created sculptures that are but a vague reminiscence of the original historical model, from which they have liberated themselves in stages, to assert their own existence in the end.

Wax, a flexible, user-friendly material, has been deployed widely throughout art history in the area of applied arts and for maquettes of planned sculptures. Rebecca Stevenson (*1971, lives in London), in contrast to the hyperrealism of the 60s or 90s, uses wax to sculpturally paraphrase the depiction of reality found in her poetic-macabre allegories.

The always intensely colorful figurative scenarios in the paintings of Lorenzo Pompa (*1962, lives in Düsseldorf) are joined at regular intervals, as if in an ongoing dialogue, by black-silver abstract works in which the oil paint is constrained in minimalistic gesture that depending on the size can become an almost unlimited textural field. This show presents the latest of these paintings.

Michael Wittassek (*1958, lives near Cologne), for his part, works mainly in the form of installation with sculptures of folded, crumpled sheets of exposed photographic paper. Here, however, we are showing mid-sized black, mirrored objects with a reflective convex surface that seems to suck in the surrounding space and even the viewers themselves.

We would like to thank the participating artists for their generous constructive input.

Rebecca Stevenson

Fantasia

January 1, 2010

Taking its title from the 1940 Disney animation, the exhibition will feature new and recent sculpture that exploits Baroque forms and kitsch subjects to uncover issues around consumption, pleasure and desire. Using overtly sentimental subjects (perky twin bunny rabbits, a child posing with a kitten), the works are characterised by a fetishtic use of decoration that supplants or corrupts the object‘s original meaning. Shifting continually between the beautiful and the grotesque, the work delights in playing with expectations and assumptions of what constitutes good and bad „taste“, both on an aesthetic and sensory level.

„I am concerned with both the visual experience and the meaning of excess, of sensual overload, of ornament and surface. Sculpted animals and portrait busts are cut open and the resulting wounds stuffed with fauna and fruit. Sugary white surfaces twist out like candy sticks, giving way to juicy apples and delicate roses; a liquorice-black bear is drizzled with what looks like lemon sherbert and decorated with marzipan-yellow scrolls; a lamb‘s head unfurls to spill glistening grapes and berries. These works are confections, served up for the viewer like bizarre delicacies from a banquet table. Influenced by the Baroque fashion for elaborate sugar sculptures, I am fascinated by the decadence and absurdity of food whose primary function is not to provide nourishment, but rather has a symbolic or celebratory purpose.

Like Disney‘s „Fantasia“, my work is by turns charming, pastoral, unsettling and absurd. The spectacle, whilst apparently innocent, is not without unease for the viewer. The need to touch, taste or somehow physically connect with the piece, the „pull“ exerted by an image of a bear cub or a human child, is laced with forbidden fruit and sticky sweetmeats. The nostalgic or sentimental longings associated with „cute“ subjects are confused by a more immediate, visceral urge to consume the work, either literally, because of its likeness to cake or confectionery, or visually. The pieces can be viewed as „pretty“ or „sweet“, but can also be seen as expressions of primal fantasies, anxieties and desires related to sensuality, food and the body.

The Baroque can be thought of as describing not only an artistic period or style, but also certain natural patterns and forms, such as the breaking of waves on a shore or the veins running through a piece of marble. My work is driven by this almost Darwinian vision of the Baroque, associated with the profusion of nature, the processes of generation that can result in a hybrid rose, a coral reef, a mushroom or a tumour. In Disney‘s Fantasia, a sequence depicting the evolution of life on earth is followed by the kitsch romanticism of centaur couples canoodling like high school sweethearts. My work seeks to articulate similar (lovely and problematic) contradictions, on the one hand trying to replicate nature, whilst on the other continually allowing fancy and sentiment to influence the work. The resulting pieces are deliberately hard to classify or describe, like curios or objects from a wunderkammer, they occupy a liminal territory, slipping between the objective and subjective, the seductive and repellent.“

Rebecca Stevenson

Fantasia

January 1, 2010

Taking its title from the 1940 Disney animation, the exhibition will feature new and recent sculpture that exploits Baroque forms and kitsch subjects to uncover issues around consumption, pleasure and desire. Using overtly sentimental subjects (perky twin bunny rabbits, a child posing with a kitten), the works are characterised by a fetishtic use of decoration that supplants or corrupts the object‘s original meaning. Shifting continually between the beautiful and the grotesque, the work delights in playing with expectations and assumptions of what constitutes good and bad „taste“, both on an aesthetic and sensory level.

„I am concerned with both the visual experience and the meaning of excess, of sensual overload, of ornament and surface. Sculpted animals and portrait busts are cut open and the resulting wounds stuffed with fauna and fruit. Sugary white surfaces twist out like candy sticks, giving way to juicy apples and delicate roses; a liquorice-black bear is drizzled with what looks like lemon sherbert and decorated with marzipan-yellow scrolls; a lamb‘s head unfurls to spill glistening grapes and berries. These works are confections, served up for the viewer like bizarre delicacies from a banquet table. Influenced by the Baroque fashion for elaborate sugar sculptures, I am fascinated by the decadence and absurdity of food whose primary function is not to provide nourishment, but rather has a symbolic or celebratory purpose.

Like Disney‘s „Fantasia“, my work is by turns charming, pastoral, unsettling and absurd. The spectacle, whilst apparently innocent, is not without unease for the viewer. The need to touch, taste or somehow physically connect with the piece, the „pull“ exerted by an image of a bear cub or a human child, is laced with forbidden fruit and sticky sweetmeats. The nostalgic or sentimental longings associated with „cute“ subjects are confused by a more immediate, visceral urge to consume the work, either literally, because of its likeness to cake or confectionery, or visually. The pieces can be viewed as „pretty“ or „sweet“, but can also be seen as expressions of primal fantasies, anxieties and desires related to sensuality, food and the body.

The Baroque can be thought of as describing not only an artistic period or style, but also certain natural patterns and forms, such as the breaking of waves on a shore or the veins running through a piece of marble. My work is driven by this almost Darwinian vision of the Baroque, associated with the profusion of nature, the processes of generation that can result in a hybrid rose, a coral reef, a mushroom or a tumour. In Disney‘s Fantasia, a sequence depicting the evolution of life on earth is followed by the kitsch romanticism of centaur couples canoodling like high school sweethearts. My work seeks to articulate similar (lovely and problematic) contradictions, on the one hand trying to replicate nature, whilst on the other continually allowing fancy and sentiment to influence the work. The resulting pieces are deliberately hard to classify or describe, like curios or objects from a wunderkammer, they occupy a liminal territory, slipping between the objective and subjective, the seductive and repellent.“