Avril Corroon and Amy Steel

PEER, 97-99 Hoxton Street
Avril Corroon and Amy Steel image
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Covid 19 Information
It is not necessary to book an appointment to visit the exhibition, however in order to manage the visitors’ flow only four people will be allowed into the gallery at any one time. Children must be supervised by an adult at all times and should not, under any circumstance, be allowed to touch any surface or artwork in the gallery.

We request that all visitors wear face coverings when visiting the gallery to protect our staff and others. Additionally, a contactless hand sanitiser will be installed at the entrance, and we ask all visitors to make use of this upon arrival.

Exhibition text will be displayed on the gallery wall and a link will be provided to our website where further information will be accessible via your personal devices.

Please note there will be no access to PEER’s communal spaces including toilets.

If you have any questions about any of these safety measures in place, please send us an email at [email protected]
Event has ended
This event ended on Sunday 30th of May 2021
Admission
Free
Venue Information
Peer
Hoxton Street, N1 6QL
Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Hoxton 0.24 miles

EVENTS
Monday 17 May, 12:00 – 20:00: Opening Day (Artists present all day)
Thursday 20 May, 18:00 – 20:00: Oisin McKenna reading in response to Avril Corroon – free & open to all
Wednesday 26 May, 18:00 – 19:00: Online talk with Amy Steel & Claire Louise Bennett – Book Here FREE
Thursday 27 May, 18:00 – 20:00: Late opening

PEER presents the work of Avril Corroon and Amy Steel, two artists who completed a yearlong studio residency at Acme’s Warton House studios in 2020 after graduating from MA courses at London-based art colleges. The exhibition marks the fifth year of partnership between PEER and Acme. This important partnership offers emerging artists a significant opportunity at a crucial point in their career to exhibit at an acclaimed gallery and benefit from mentoring and guidance provided by PEER’s team.

Avril Corroon (Goldsmiths MFA Award, 2019/20) works across moving image, performance and sculpture to examine contemporary precarious living conditions including the housing crisis, wealth inequity and labour exploitation. Her work combines absurd humour and critique to form visual narratives, often incorporating ephemeral materials such as fragrances, sticky floors, damp and leftover food. These feature to activate sense of touch and smell, examining notions of taste and class using bodily communication. For many of her moving image and performances she activates existing architecture as analogical of power structures by climbing or intervening in the site, usually inaccessible areas like rooftops. The act of rising to the sky or performing from above is symbolic to overcoming, or indeed becoming a hierarch.

Amy Steel (Adrian Carruthers Award, 2019/20) combines painting and performance to create expansive, sensual environments where women unravel and explore themes such as sexuality, creativity and the desire to be part of something bigger. Fascinated by the complex relationships humans have with nature, Steel’s dream-like paintings often feature animals and female body parts, which meld into the mysterious and luminous landscapes. This luminosity is translated through Steel’s specific use of colour, through which she creates an atmosphere that is charged with emotion. The paintings are pointedly ambiguous, enabling the viewer to sense the work and react emotionally rather than by responding to an overly prescriptive narrative.

Acme’s early career programme provides artists in their first five years of practice with a variety of support structures, including financial subsidy, rent relief, professional development, mentoring, presentation and exhibition opportunities. The programme aims to make a substantial intervention at critical moments in artists’ careers, as they transition from the supportive environment of an arts institution into lifelong professional practice.

The Goldsmiths MFA Award is a partnership between Acme and Goldsmiths College and generously supported by Jane Hamlyn. The Adrian Carruthers Award is a partnership between Acme and The Slade School of Fine Art and is generously supported by the family of Adrian Carruthers.

Tags: Exhibition

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