Roger Mortimer, APOCRYPHA, new paintings
Roger Mortimer, APOCRYPHA, new paintings
Bartley +
Company Art
56A Ghuznee Street, Wellington
16 June –
11 July 2009
Bartley + Company Art is pleased to introduce
Auckland painter Roger Mortimer and to present his first
Wellington exhibition. Mortimer, who has a Bachelor of Fine
Arts from the University of Auckland, is included in Warwick
Brown’s recent book seen this century, which identifies
100 artists who have come to prominence this
century.
The word APOCRYPHA refers to things that
have been hidden away – and most commonly to texts left
out of the Bible, out of the Christian Canon. In using the
word as the title for his exhibition, Roger Mortimer is
playing with ideas around the creation of artistic canons
and as Brown notes he has “his tongue in his artistic
cheek”. Mortimer is “in” but his ideas, he seems to
suggest, are out – and certainly they are outside
contemporary and popular culture. Mortimer derives
inspiration from history and legend, from medieval texts,
illuminated manuscripts, religious imagery and maps. As
tales of the Holy Grail portray quests for wisdom, so too
Mortimer’s “elegant paintings” represent his search
for a personal cosmology to make sense of contemporary
global turbulence. And as viewers, we are drawn into the
quest to decipher the clues, codes, symbols and signs
depicted in his enchanting maps of mythical landscapes. And
to quote Warwick Brown again:
Whatever the answers, what is certain is that Mortimer’s deeply personal images are things never before seen, and therefore perhaps as precious as those original manuscripts.
ends