FAD Magazine

FAD Magazine covers contemporary art – News, Exhibitions and Interviews reported on from London

Matilda Sutton’s solo exhibition Bristling opens this week.

Pipeline to present Bristling, Matilda Sutton’s first solo exhibition with the gallery.

Matilda Sutton, Conspirators’ 2023, 100 x 150 cm, acrylic on collaged Lokta paper substrate, Courtesy the artist and gallery

Working between painting, drawing, textile and sculpture, Matilda Sutton weaves together narrative through image and object. Her solo exhibition Bristling brings together a new body of work which expands on a core impulse in Sutton’s practice; to investigate the boundaries of the body and the self. Rooted in both archetypal, cultural narratives, personal experience and embodiment, the imagery across Sutton’s work features beings somewhere between humanness and animalness. These images of fraught solitude and complex intimacy through means of story and object, attempt to express the tensions between individuality and connectedness, dependence and independence.

Matilda Sutton, My body is not the boat’ 2023, 100 x 75 cm, acrylic on collaged Lokta paper substrate and wooden dowel, Courtesy the artist and gallery

In Sutton’s paintings and drawings, creatures engage in actions and glances that are born from questions raised in searching the faulty borders of the body, identity and self. They seem to ask how we conceive of our wholeness, or lack thereof, and negotiate our edges. Painted on paper in a material attempt to dissolve categorical ways of seeing, Sutton’s ‘people-creatures’ move away from their solitary activities into relation with each other. Sometimes interactions are focalised, other times one individual interrupts the other, hovering in the periphery and only half in the frame.

Matilda Sutton, ‘Night Cap’ 2023, 57 x 75cm, multimedia drawing on rag paper – ink, pencil and acrylic paint, Courtesy the artist and gallery

The sculptures which Sutton refers to as ‘Poppets’, are made from plaster, recycled packaging, skewers, air dry clay, cloth and paint. They appear as cone-like, totemic figures tottering on spindly legs with painted or sculpted faces that are uniquely made to mark the oddness of ourselves as individuals. Each has a particular outfit, contrasting heavy wool suiting with sheer muslin and rough linen, they wear cloaks and bonnets, smocks and skirts. For Sutton, the ‘Poppets’ enable us to feel our way around the shapes of ourselves. They are a learning tool, a way to play and understand which historically has been one of the earliest assertions of self. This return to fundamental ways of seeing encapsulates Sutton’s unique, primordial approach evident also in her illustrative style of painting.

The questioning of binary systems and conceptual dualisms is central to Sutton’s practice which takes ‘gender’ and ‘species’ in its hands to prod and poke. Here the story can be both content and method. Taking symbols as tools, Sutton begins a way of finding, charting a journey through the dark and the misty places in between.

Matilda Sutton, Bristling, 11th January – 24th February, 2024, Pipeline

Art opening Wednesday 10th January 6-8pm

About the artist

Matilda Sutton (1994) is based in Newcastle upon Tyne. She graduated from Newcastle University in 2019 and participated in The NewBridge Project Collective Studio programme 2020-21. Sutton recently had a solo exhibition at Vane, Gateshead, UK (2023) and Clifford Chance, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK (2023). Vane presented a solo booth of Sutton’s work at British Art Fair, Saatchi Gallery, London (2023). Group exhibitions include Newcastle Contemporary Arts (2023), Vane, Gateshead, UK (2022 and 2021); Turner Contemporary, Margate, UK (2022); Quench, Margate, UK (2022) and BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, UK (2021).

Categories

Tags

Related Posts

Matilda Sutton talks to Mark Westall

Ahead of her first solo exhibition at Pipeline Contemporary and a presentation of her work at London Art Fair, I managed to ask a few questions of up & coming artist Matilda Sutton.

Trending Articles

Join the FAD newsletter and get the latest news and articles straight to your inbox

* indicates required