ART-PRESENTATION: Rachel Kneebone-Raft

Rachel Kneebone, Still Life Triptych, 2011, Porcelain, 24 7/16 × 57 1/16 × 18 1/2 in. (62 × 145 × 47 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube galleryRachel Kneebone’s work addresses and questions the human condition: renewal, life cycles and the physical body. Working primarily in sculpture that embraces the unpredictable nature of its medium – porcelain – Kneebone focuses on ideas of movement and metamorphosis, transformation and suspension and the material manifestation of fluid physical states. Kneebone has stated that her work is “concerned with inhabiting the body, what it is to be alive in the world”.

By Efi MIchalarou
Photo: White Cube Archive

Featuring porcelain sculptures and drawings, the works by Rachel Kneebone in his solo exhibition “Raft”, focus on themes of transformation and metamorphosis, and the material manifestation of these fluid physical and mental states. The title of the exhibition alludes to Géricault’s monumental painting “The Raft of the Medusa” (1818–19). A high point of French Romanticism, the painting depicts a moment of grave crisis with desperate bodies cast adrift following the wreck of a naval frigate. Kneebone’s reference to Gericault’s painting, however, goes beyond specific iconography and instead cuts across space and time, invoking contemporary concerns such as the perils of migration, the tragedy of displaced persons, but also hope in the face of despair. Kneebone’s work is resolved through a process of creative exchange between herself and her material, between decisive acts of modelling and the elements of chance that are bound up in working with porcelain. ‘To disregard control of the material means setting things up to unfold as they will, rather than making things happen. This enables me to work beyond my limitations,’ she has commented. In Kneebone’s sculptures, compositions emerge and dissolve into undulating masses of modelled clay. Recumbent limbs stretch out into the surrounding space in different directions, with vegetal forms interwoven and conjoined. In each, a single, smooth orb sits in contrast to these dense and intricate parts, as if anchoring the whole and forestalling collapse. While the sculptures are related through repetition of form and scale, marked compositional differences occur, these often being the outcome of the porcelain absorbing and integrating the variable tensions, splits and collapses acquired during the firing process. Kneebone has chosen a deep blue colour for the gallery walls so that the sculptures, framed by this dark expanse, seem to be emerging from or sinking into the mud or seabed. In this way, the new work “Quill”  (2021) appears fluid in its essence, an assemblage of elongated tendrils winding into a sculptural relief that extends and reaches outwards across the gallery wall. In the ground floor gallery, a single large-scale sculpture, Shell” (2020) hangs suspended from the ceiling. No longer bound to wall or plinth, it exemplifies the artist’s concerns with motion, weightlessness and transformation. An assemblage of cascading interwoven forms, delicate flower wreaths extend and writhe around its core, its spools of ribbon barely holding it together. Kneebone has commented that “Shell”  “feels like a free form, or free-falling dissolve of form, almost like a vapour […] an unfolding or an unravelling”. As with all of her work, the forms of Shell”  exhibit a contradictory directionality, and in doing so, create a tension between its mass and its fractures and between light and shadow. Both rising and falling, the work contains both ornate detail and areas of emptiness, so that the work is poised between its own internal resolution and potential dissolution. Kneebone’s new series of drawings echo her process of making the sculptures, the building and removing of partial, connected and extended figurative lines. “Raft I” (2020) features a continuous wheel-like pattern of conjoined limbs, freely emerging as the artist rotates the paper while she draws. ‘It’s a shared way of looking, an active looking at and through things; line and shape and form and suggestion, hints or glimpses to follow, bring out or rub away. A movement to fuse things and create new form from a blurring or dissolve of boundaries,’ she has stated.

Photo: Rachel Kneebone, Still Life Triptych, 2011, Porcelain, 24 7/16 × 57 1/16 × 18 1/2 in. (62 × 145 × 47 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube gallery

Info: White Cube Mason’s Yard, 25 – 26 Mason’s Yard, London, England, Duration: 7/7-4/9/2021, Days & Hours: Tue-Sat 10:00-18:00, https://whitecube.com

Left: Rachel Kneebone, 399 Days, 2012–2013, Porcelain and mild steel, 212 5/8 × 113 × 111 7/16 in. (540 × 287 × 283 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery  Right: Rachel Kneebone, Rib, 2019, Porcelain, steel and adhesive, 71 5/8 × 25 9/16 × 11 in. (182 × 65 × 28 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery
Left: Rachel Kneebone, 399 Days, 2012–2013, Porcelain and mild steel, 212 5/8 × 113 × 111 7/16 in. (540 × 287 × 283 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery
Right: Rachel Kneebone, Rib, 2019, Porcelain, steel and adhesive, 71 5/8 × 25 9/16 × 11 in. (182 × 65 × 28 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery

 

 

Rachel Kneebone, Ovid in Exile, 2016, Porcelain, Corian and adhesive, 26 3/16 x 35 13/16 x 35 13/16 in. (66.5 x 91 x 91 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery
Rachel Kneebone, Ovid in Exile, 2016, Porcelain, Corian and adhesive, 26 3/16 x 35 13/16 x 35 13/16 in. (66.5 x 91 x 91 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery

 

 

Rachel Kneebone, Raft of the Medusa III, 2015, Porcelain, Corian and adhesive, 26 × 21 5/8 × 20 1/16 in. (66 × 55 × 51 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery
Rachel Kneebone, Raft of the Medusa III, 2015, Porcelain, Corian and adhesive, 26 × 21 5/8 × 20 1/16 in. (66 × 55 × 51 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery

 

 

Rachel Kneebone, Streak, 2017, Porcelain, Corian and adhesive, 19 7/8 × 34 1/16 × 27 9/16 in. (50.5 × 86.5 × 70 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery
Rachel Kneebone, Streak, 2017, Porcelain, Corian and adhesive, 19 7/8 × 34 1/16 × 27 9/16 in. (50.5 × 86.5 × 70 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery

 

 

Rachel Kneebone, Streak, 2017, Porcelain, Corian and adhesive, 19 7/8 × 34 1/16 × 27 9/16 in. (50.5 × 86.5 × 70 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery
Rachel Kneebone, Streak, 2017, Porcelain, Corian and adhesive, 19 7/8 × 34 1/16 × 27 9/16 in. (50.5 × 86.5 × 70 cm), © Rachel Kneebone, Courtesy the artist and white Cube Gallery