'The Nursery': Ruth van Beek
The Ravestijn Gallery is proud to announce The Nursery, a solo show by Ruth van Beek. The exhibition will comprise of new collages and manuals that have their beginnings in van Beek’s growing archive of dolls and their making.
In 2018, van Beek published How To Do The Flowers, an absurdist manual of strange instructions and unfinished collages in which the building of a body was a persistent thought. Since then, the physicality and animation of lifeless matter has played an increasingly important role in her work. Using How To Do The Flowers as a guide, The Nursery continues this fascination with the transformation of forms into bodies and the possibilities of photographs as both representations and objects.
For most of us, dolls are emblems of the inexplicable affection we have for objects. They, along with other childhood toys, are amongst the first objects we feel emotion for. Yet for all the memories attached to caring for and playing with dolls, they cannot escape their existence as objects. We can always see their construction – see their joins and touch their plastic skin. But that doesn’t stop us from feeling; seeing them as fertile ground for our imagination. This dichotomy, between object and emotion, between the lifeless essence of a doll and its ability to kindle emotion is the root of van Beek’s intrigue.
Exercising her distinctive approach, van Beek has then physically intruded into the found images from her archive. Painted pieces of card poke, manipulate and conceal. Toes and fingers peek around corners, colours collide, abstract forms emerge and overflow, fragments are obscured whilst others are made clear, and each collage becomes a new object, stuck somewhere between reality and fantasy.
Her interventions, however, are unplanned. They are a fluid conversation between her and the original photographs. Just like talking to dolls is commonplace, so too is van Beek’s dialogue with her collages. And just like dolls are invitations to care for something, so too are van Beek’s collages for her. These new collages are van Beek’s dolls of the present – tenderly played with as her imagination runs wild.
Whereas the images that lie beneathwill always be static, van Beek has animated them through collage; allowing them to breathe gently and drawing them nearer to the feeling of wonder we have for the toys of our childhood. In their abstracted form, paper folds become the creases of skin, shapes become clothes and the flat photographs become the living. Abstraction may conceal the figurative subject but van Beek knows it reveals much more. Here, van Beek is provoking us to think, feel, sense and experience, testing how far she has to go for our imaginations to be ignited. What we are left with is a mounting belief in the new characters that arise from her collages and a lingering curiosity as to what is behind the shapes and colours.
It would be reasonable to think that the title of the exhibition alludes to a childlike home for van Beek’s enigmatic creations. Yet the origin lies elsewhere. Van Beek stumbled across an archive brimming with ephemera from fruit and vegetable growers and was taken by the exuberance of the material. Lovingly produced and exaggerated to the point of metamorphosis, this newly found archive began to melt into the archive of dolls. Peaches and blushed cheeks are not so different. It’s telling that an archive of fruit and vegetables was the start of this exhibition’s name. Two seemingly unrelated subjects brought together by free association. For van Beek, imagination is everything.
Ruth van Beek’s work has been shown internationally at amongst others FOMU (BE); ETAL Gallery, (US); The Ravestijn Gallery (NL); Les Rencontres d’Arles (FR); Flowers Gallery (UK) and Fraenkel Gallery (US) amongst others.
Her work has been featured in magazines such as Centrefold Magazine, Foam Magazine, IMA Magazine, The British Journal of Photography, The Aperture Photobook Review, Financial Times, Elephant Magazine and The New York Times.
She has published numerous artist books including The Arrangement (2013) which was shortlisted for the Aperture Photobook of the Year Award in 2014 and How To Do The Flowers (2018), co-published by Art Paper Editions (BE) and Dashwood Books (US) to widespread acclaim. Her new book, Eldorado, made in collaboration with Willem Van Zoetendaal and published by Van Zoetendaal Publishers, will be released this autumn.
COVID-19
Maximum allowance of 10 people at a time inside the gallery to be completely safe, we all keep our distance. Masks and disinfecting handlotion will be available.
If you would like to see the show in private please don't hesitate to make an appointment. We are happy to show you around.
E: info@theravestijngallery.com
P: +31 6 1651 0221
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Ruth van Beek, The Largest in the Smallest, 2020
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Ruth van Beek, The Levitators, 2013
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 45), 2019
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 46), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 47), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 17), 2018
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 18), 2018
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 37), 2019
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 44), 2019
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 57), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 60), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 61), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 62), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 65), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 66), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 67), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 68), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (Figure 69), 2020
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Ruth van Beek, Everbearing Varieties, 2020
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Ruth van Beek, The Situation Room (two figures), 2016
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (hair 2), 2016
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Ruth van Beek, Untitled (figure 9), 2017