Press Release

Pilar Corrias is pleased to present a group exhibition of works by Koo Jeong A, Ragna Bley, Keren Cytter, Sophie von Hellermann, Manuel Mathieu, Mary Ramsden, Rachel Rose, and Julião Sarmento.

Tapping into the history of the ocean as an image of the sublime and the unconscious, Your Mind is Now an Ocean brings together a range of artworks that evoke the ebb and flow of the tides, rivers, seas and beaches, offering a spectrum of seductive blues in which to lose oneself. At the heart of the exhibition is Keren Cytter’s short film Ocean (2014), a dreamlike arrangement of seemingly unconnected narratives. Cytter’s film begins with a modest family dinner that starts peacefully before descending into a furious squabble. We then meet a Hispanic couple, and a chorus of lovers on a beach rolling around beside a fire; as the film progresses the narrator seems to suggest that the ocean offers a kind of relief or alternative to everyday turmoil. The film concludes with a shot of the beach on a calm day, accompanied by the phrase, ‘your mind is now an ocean’.

Manuel Mathieu’s The Poetry in our Disappearance (2023) churns with rich blues and purples, evoking the flow of water withdrawing from a tide pool, while Sophie von Hellermann’s Out of the Blue (2022) depicts a bunch of bathers at the seaside in a state of what could be either delight or alarm. Mary Ramsden’s well up (2019) depicts what might be a seascape on the left side of the canvas, with sailboats quietly gliding through a moonlit night; marks on the right side, meanwhile, act as formal conceits that both balance the composition and confirm that the painting is palpably abstract. Koo Jeong A’s blue-ink drawings feature minimally rendered cliffs and rocky outcroppings; in one a solitary swimmer dives into an unseen body of water. Based on Koo’s experiences of swimming, the drawings suggest the sublimity of being alone in nature, suspended in water. Ragna Bley conjures a similar sensation of movement and suspension in her painting Drift (2023). Waves of translucent blue flow across the cotton surface, intermingling with sinuous washes of reds and yellows, creating a lush amalgamation of two contrasting energies. ‘If you don’t want to drown, be an ocean’, says Cytter’s narrator, implying that a loss of control or identity might be the only thing to save your life.

Based on Francisco Goya’s Naked woman with a mirror (c. 1794–1997), Julião Sarmento’s Mujer desnuda con espejo (Miami Blue) (2020) depicts a naked girl holding a mirror, sat with her back turned to the viewer. Sarmento splashes the girl in pale blue pigment, which he juxtaposes with a sharp rectangle of turquoise. In Rachel Rose’s North Salem Moon (1993) (2022) a hazy full moon in a midnight blue sky For all press enquiries,

Press release courtesy Pilar Corrias

Read More

Installation Views

Artists Exhibiting

Also Exhibiting at Pilar Corrias

About the Gallery

Pilar Corrias Gallery is a contemporary art gallery owned by Pilar Corrias.Since its inception, the gallery has worked with emerging and established artists with the central aim of allowing their work to grow both in terms of production of new projects and the making of new exhibitions. Pilar Corrias now represents a total of thirty-five international artists, two-thirds of whom are female.

View Gallery Profile
Address
2 Savile Row
London
United Kingdom
Opening Hours
Tuesday – Friday
10am – 6pm
Saturday
11am – 6pm
(1)
London 2 Savile Row
Pilar Corrias
2 Savile Row, London, United Kingdom
+44 20 7323 7000
http://www.pilarcorrias.com

Opening hours
Tuesday – Friday
10am – 6pm
Saturday
11am – 6pm
The art world in focus