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Defeat
Is The Inspiration For New Regatta Exhibition
14 April 2008: A striking new exhibition
about the pain of being beaten in competition
is coming to the River & Rowing Museum,
Henley-on-Thames 10 May - 6 July 2008. Gollon
at Henley, by leading British artist
Chris Gollon, is the first artistic study
of the Henley Royal Regatta to explore defeat.
Press preview and artist interviews:
Friday 9 May 1000 - 1400hrs at the River
& Rowing Museum, Henley on Thames. RSVP:
william@kallaway.co.uk or 020 7221 7883
The exhibition is centred around the major
work, Gollon at Henley, commissioned
by the River & Rowing Museum. Gollon
will use his fascination with tragi-comedy,
the grotesque and absurd to portray the
pain of losing. The work Gollon at Henley
juxtaposes a defeated rower against the
colourful Regatta crowd indifferent to his
pain. The painting, together with the exhibition's
other works will be revealed for the first
time at the River & Rowing Museum. Gollon's
silkscreen prints will be for sale in the
Museum shop.
Gollon accepted the River & Rowing Museum's
commission to produce Gollon At Henley
after learning about the 'winner takes all'
aspect of the Regatta. Only one team wins
and there are no medals for second or third
place. He was interested in how this would
enable him to explore defeat in sport.
Following its display at the Museum, the
exhibition will tour the USA after which
the main work 'Gollon at Henley'
will return to the River & Rowing Museum
for permanent display. The work will be
hung beside the famous French artist
Raoul Dufy's work Regatta at Henley
(circa 1930). Dufy's Fauvist style of strident
colours, simplification and abstraction
is in marked contrast to Gollon's physical
approach to painting. Visitors will be able
to contrast two very different artistic
interpretations of the Regatta painted almost
a century apart.
The Henley Royal Regatta will be held from
2 - 6 July 2008.
Gollon at Henley is sponsored by
Beefeater Gin and the American Friends of
the River & Rowing Museum.
The exhibition includes a large diptych
used by the artist to create the final work
Gollon at Henley. The study colourfully
depicts a very British sporting scene, but
with tragic comedy and absurdity. The left
hand canvas shows women either crying or
indifferent to the losing crew shown in
the right hand panel. The rowers, mournful
and shocked in defeat stare at the crowd
and out of the painting, their limbs grotesquely
massive and heavy. One rower's hand reaches
off the canvas, towards the crowd as if
seeking reassurance and help. In the foreground,
'drunken' champagne glasses touch each other
and make a small still life within the work,
hinting at a human drama beyond the canvas.
Gollon visited the Regatta in 2007 taking
photographs and making sketches. He focused
on the body language of rowers; the elation
of victory and draining emotion of defeat.
He was interested in how all energy instantly
leaves a losing crew; their limbs become
heavy and limp. He was struck by how this
drama is played out in front of a colourful
crowd often seemingly unaware of the losing
crew. The crowd's jollity seemed to add
a further poignancy to the weight and sadness
of defeat.
The River & Rowing Museum, with the
aid of the Victoria & Albert Museum,
purchased Gollon's hinged triptych Big
Fish Eat Little Fish, for its permanent
collection in 2001.
Gollon's work has been exhibited internationally
including five solo museum shows. Gollon
is one of very few living artists to be
commissioned by the Church of England to
paint the Stations of The Cross. His work
was unveiled on Good Friday 2008 in The
Church of St John on Bethnal Green. Gollon's
new film installation 'Kaleidomorphism'
will be premiered at the East End Film Festival
on April 18 2008. Chris Gollon is represented
by IAP Fine Art, London, www.iapfineart.com.
Entrance to the River & Rowing Museum
is from £3.50 for adults and £2.50
for children. Each ticket is valid for 12
months free access to the Museum.
Paul Mainds, Trustee & Chief Executive,
River & Rowing Museum, said: "For
each Henley winner there are many more losers.
In choosing Chris for this commission we
were looking for someone who would really
ignore the traditional jolliness and strawberries
of so many Henley paintings and look at
the very heart of the matter."
I wanted Chris to explore what is going
on in that lonely moment when defeat ends
a season's training. The emotion of losing
and the bitterness of defeat are feelings
that bind athletes and fans together, and
something to which we can all relate. Chris'
work is powerful and evocative; I am sure
that it will inspire audiences to think
about sporting success and defeat."
Nick Blacknell, Brand Director for Beefeater
Gin, said: "As a long-term sponsor
of the Boat Race through the 80's and 90's
Beefeater has always had a close association
with rowing. We're delighted to be able
to continue this association and sponsor
this remarkable new commission. Gollon has
dramatically captured the drama of competition
and we look forward to a successful showing
in the USA later this year."
Chris Gollon said: "I am
fascinated about human endeavor and the
effort required to be the best. Of course
there is a flip side, and this is losing.
The pain of not reaching one's goals is
something we can all relate to. In a physical
sport like rowing the heaviness and loneliness
of defeat is touching. I was taken by the
drama of the competition, the determination
and brutal effort to win, quickly followed
by the sharpness of losing. This is what
I've tried to capture in my paintings."
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Further Information
Kallaway Limited (www.kallaway.co.uk)
Will Kallaway
T: +44 (0)20 7221 7883
E: will.kallaway@kallaway.co.uk
Amanda Dellor
T: (01491) 415642
E: amanda.dellor@rrm.co.uk
Pictures
The low resolution images attached provide
an example of the high resolution images available.
High resolution images can be downloaded direct
to your desktop from:
http://www.kallaway.co.uk/rrm-picture-library-login.asp
The images attached are:
The Diptych, as described in the release.
Examples of the silk screen prints available
at the River & Rowing Museum
All can can be downloaded from: http://www.kallaway.co.uk/rrm-picture-library-login.asp
Press Preview
The exhibition will be open for members
of the press on 9 May from 10:00 - 14:00hrs.
If you would like to preview the exhibition
earlier please contact Kallaway on 020 7221
7883 to arrange. Artist Chris Gollon, will
be available for interview from early on 9
May 2008. Contact Kallaway to arrange an interview.
The preview will be held at the River &
Rowing Museum, Mill Meadows, Henley on Thames,
Oxfordshire RG9 1BF, maps can downloaded from
www.rrm.co.uk
Notes to Editors
About the Henley Royal Regatta
The Henley Royal Regatta first began in 1839
and pre-dates any national or international
rowing organisation in the world. As such
it has its own rules and the five day race
attracts teams from across the world. Races
are head-to-head knock out competitions, raced
over a course of 1 mile, 550 yards (2,112
m). The most prestigious event at the regatta
is the Grand
Challenge Cup for Men's Eights, which
has been awarded since the regatta was first
staged.
The River & Rowing Museum (www.rrm.co.uk)
The River & Rowing Museum attracts over
100,000 visitors a year and celebrates three
themes:
The past, present and future of the River
Thames;
The
historic riverside community of Henley on
Thames;
The international sport of rowing.
These themes are explored through a wide variety
of exhibitions and events across four galleries
and special exhibitions. One of the Museum's
major successes has been The Wind in the Willows
exhibition which recreates the timeless E
H Shepard illustrations from Kenneth Grahame's
famous novel. Since opening in August 1998
the Museum has received numerous awards for
its design and architecture, including the
National Heritage/NPI Museum of the Year award.
The River & Rowing Museum is part of the
Thames Valley Museums Group (TVMG) Family
Friendly initiative - a scheme which brings
together 29 museums across Berkshire, Oxfordshire
and Buckinghamshire, to promote their popular
appeal to the whole family
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Address
The River & Rowing Museum,
Mills Meadows,
Henley on Thames,
Oxfordshire,
RG9 1BF.
Tel. 01491 415600.
Web: www.rrm.co.uk |
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The museum, terrace café
and shop is open every day from 10am
- 5.30pm in summer and 10am - 5pm in
the winter |
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Paid for tickets are valid
for re-entry to the museum for 12 months
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Admission for The Wind
in the Willows including the Galleries:
£7 for adults,
£5 for children and
£6 for senior citizens and concessions
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Admission for the Museum
Galleries:
£3.50 for adults,
£2.50 for children and
£3 for senior citizens and concessions
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Free parking for visitors
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About Beefeater Gin (www.beefeatergin.com
)
Beefeater is the world's leading premium
gin, with annual sales of 2.4 million nine
litre cases. Available in over 100 countries,
it is the only international gin still distilled
in London, at the Beefeater distillery in
Kennington.
About Chris Gollon (www.chrisgollon.com
)
Chris Gollon's new film installation 'Kaleidomorphism'
will be premiered at the East End Film Festival
on April 18 2008 and will be shown throughout
the Festival. www.eastendfilmfestival.com
On Good Friday March 21st, Chris Gollon's
14 Stations of the Cross, were unveiled
and used in the 10am service at St John
on Bethnal Green, a grade one listed church,
designed by Sir John Soane. Gollon's Station's
of the Cross commission is a major and bold
commission by the Church of England of a
modern painter. The paintings will be installed
permanently, when the restoration of the
church, funded by English Heritage, finishes.
The unveiling is the culmination of an eight
year commission of historic importance,
which will become an integral part of the
church.
Chris Gollon is an established name in British
painting. He exhibited at ART'97 Chicago,
and has had 5 solo museum shows in the UK.
In 1998, he exhibited with Yoko Ono, David
Bowie and Gavin Turk in 'ROOT', a crossover
exhibition of contemporary music and art
created by Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth,
at the Chisenhale Gallery, London. (Thurston
Moore sent Chris a specially composed piece
of music, and invited him to make a painting
inspired by it).
In 2000, Gollon accepted a major commission
from the Church of England to paint 14 Stations
of the Cross for a grade-one listed church
in London, designed by Sir John Soane. Eight
years in the making, Gollon's Church commission
was unveiled Good Friday 2008.
In 2001, the award-winning River & Rowing
Museum in Henley-on-Thames, (with the aid
of the Victoria & Albert Museum), purchased
Gollon's hinged triptych 'Big Fish Eat Little
Fish', which now forms part of the permanent
collection alongside works by Whistler,
Piper and Dufy. In 2004, Chris Gollon was
invited to show in St Paul's Cathedral with
Bill Viola, Craigie Aitchison, Maggi Hambling
and Tracey Emin. In 2005, the Huddersfield
Art Gallery purchased a major work by Chris
Gollon entitled 'Einstein & The Jealous
Monk', which now hangs in the permanent
collection alongside works by L.S. Lowry
and Francis Bacon.
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