Presentation
In my practice I attempt to use painting to examine the ways in which we experience and understand landscape. Intermediates – like windows, screens, postcards – can inform a potentially problematic understanding of the world around us, and create an image of “nature” as something separate from humanity.
A traditional or idealist concept of Nature comes from a Romanticised image of a pristine wilderness, untouched by humans: but this concept is something that progressive ecologists and eco-critics are trying to dismantle, because it feeds into a damaging human/nature binary. If we put “Nature” on a pedestal and reduce it to an object separate from us, it’s then easy to ignore. However, if this dualism could be broken down, it would be possible to gain a greater understanding of human ecology: that environmental problems are not problems that belong to the Environment, but are problems that belong to us.
I’m interested in questioning whether our experiences through different intermediaries reinforce this romanticised idea of nature. In glimpses of landscapes through moving train windows I attempt to use painting as a means to explore a more temporal experience of a landscape we’ve merely glanced at. So too in reproduced images of landscapes, like those on postcards, or in books, we gain a potentially false understanding of a place. This relates to another interesting concept, that of a “celebrity landscape” – places like Yosemite that are easily recognisable to many despite having never set foot there. Images of landscape taken through the lens of social media, and through digital platforms have inspired more recent work, such as the IMG_ series.
This line of enquiry has also lead to a parallel development of the work beyond traditional painting, in the design and build of a “Vargon” (an amalgamation of ‘vardo’ and ‘waggon’). This hand built wooden caravan is capable of moving through the landscape itself, again questioning how the ways in which we experience landscape feed into our understanding of it.
Education
2012–15 BA Fine Art Painting. (1st) Wimbledon College of Art.
2014 Accademia di Belle Arti Bologna, Italy
Exhibitions
2018 Holly Rees in ‘Blink Once You Might Miss It’ at Ernest, Newcastle
2017 Holly Rees in The Autumn Exhibition at The Biscuit Factory, Newcastle
2017 Holly Rees ‘More Than Fragments’ at The Rope Store, Isle of Wight
2017 Holly Rees Solo Show with Studio90, Suffolk
2017 London Art Fair with GX Gallery, London
2016 New York Affordable Art Fair with GX Gallery, New York
2016 Bristol Affordable Art Fair with GX Gallery, Bristol
2016 Hampstead Affordable Art Fair with GX Gallery, London
2016 The Mediated Landscape, Southwark, London
2016 Erin de Burca and Holly Rees; Recent Works, GX Gallery, London
2015 UAL Showroom, 272 High Holborn, London
2015 FloatArt 15, Bargehouse, Oxo Tower Wharf, London
2015 Friends House, Euston Rd, London
2015 Rope Store Gallery, Isle of Wight
2015 Wimbledon College of Arts Degree Show
2015 Royal Society of British Artists ‘Rising Stars’, London
2014 Hans-Brinker, Amsterdam
2014 CAPSTICKS, Wimbledon
2014 Oil and Water Gallery, Wandsworth
2014 Exquisite Corpse, Islington Arts Factory
2013 CAPSTICKS, Wimbledon
2012 Foyer Show, WCA
2011 The Dover Prize Exhibition, Darlington
Awards
2015 Shortlisted for the Clyde and Co. Art Award
2014 Shortlisted for the Hans-Brinker Painting Prize
Residencies
2015 Rope Store Gallery, Isle of Wight
Collections
2015 UAL Collection, London
2015 Private collections, London
2015 Private collection, Saudi Arabia
2014 Private collection, Amsterdam
Read more
A traditional or idealist concept of Nature comes from a Romanticised image of a pristine wilderness, untouched by humans: but this concept is something that progressive ecologists and eco-critics are trying to dismantle, because it feeds into a damaging human/nature binary. If we put “Nature” on a pedestal and reduce it to an object separate from us, it’s then easy to ignore. However, if this dualism could be broken down, it would be possible to gain a greater understanding of human ecology: that environmental problems are not problems that belong to the Environment, but are problems that belong to us.
I’m interested in questioning whether our experiences through different intermediaries reinforce this romanticised idea of nature. In glimpses of landscapes through moving train windows I attempt to use painting as a means to explore a more temporal experience of a landscape we’ve merely glanced at. So too in reproduced images of landscapes, like those on postcards, or in books, we gain a potentially false understanding of a place. This relates to another interesting concept, that of a “celebrity landscape” – places like Yosemite that are easily recognisable to many despite having never set foot there. Images of landscape taken through the lens of social media, and through digital platforms have inspired more recent work, such as the IMG_ series.
This line of enquiry has also lead to a parallel development of the work beyond traditional painting, in the design and build of a “Vargon” (an amalgamation of ‘vardo’ and ‘waggon’). This hand built wooden caravan is capable of moving through the landscape itself, again questioning how the ways in which we experience landscape feed into our understanding of it.
Education
2012–15 BA Fine Art Painting. (1st) Wimbledon College of Art.
2014 Accademia di Belle Arti Bologna, Italy
Exhibitions
2018 Holly Rees in ‘Blink Once You Might Miss It’ at Ernest, Newcastle
2017 Holly Rees in The Autumn Exhibition at The Biscuit Factory, Newcastle
2017 Holly Rees ‘More Than Fragments’ at The Rope Store, Isle of Wight
2017 Holly Rees Solo Show with Studio90, Suffolk
2017 London Art Fair with GX Gallery, London
2016 New York Affordable Art Fair with GX Gallery, New York
2016 Bristol Affordable Art Fair with GX Gallery, Bristol
2016 Hampstead Affordable Art Fair with GX Gallery, London
2016 The Mediated Landscape, Southwark, London
2016 Erin de Burca and Holly Rees; Recent Works, GX Gallery, London
2015 UAL Showroom, 272 High Holborn, London
2015 FloatArt 15, Bargehouse, Oxo Tower Wharf, London
2015 Friends House, Euston Rd, London
2015 Rope Store Gallery, Isle of Wight
2015 Wimbledon College of Arts Degree Show
2015 Royal Society of British Artists ‘Rising Stars’, London
2014 Hans-Brinker, Amsterdam
2014 CAPSTICKS, Wimbledon
2014 Oil and Water Gallery, Wandsworth
2014 Exquisite Corpse, Islington Arts Factory
2013 CAPSTICKS, Wimbledon
2012 Foyer Show, WCA
2011 The Dover Prize Exhibition, Darlington
Awards
2015 Shortlisted for the Clyde and Co. Art Award
2014 Shortlisted for the Hans-Brinker Painting Prize
Residencies
2015 Rope Store Gallery, Isle of Wight
Collections
2015 UAL Collection, London
2015 Private collections, London
2015 Private collection, Saudi Arabia
2014 Private collection, Amsterdam
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When was Holly Rees born?
The year of birth of the artist is: 1995