The Edinburgh Reporter October 2022

(EdinReporter) #1

19


CULTURE • LITERATURE • EVENTS • MUSIC • MUSEUMS...


Vibrant works of art


First UK solo show for artist Hannah Lim staged in the capital


Neil Hanna

Tribute to


the works


of Dorothy


Hogg MBE


By OLIVIA THOMAS

EDINBURGH PRINTMAKERS opens the first
solo exhibition in Scotland by emerging
Singaporean-British artist Hannah Lim,
whose vibrant artworks have captured the
attention of audiences worldwide, ahead of
further shows in New York and Milan later
this year. The London based artist is working
in printmaking for the first time as she
continues her exploration of East and South
East Asian culture and its appropriation for
Western audiences.
Speaking on her work artist Hannah Lim
said: “As a person of mixed Singaporean and
British heritage both my research and practice
has come to engage with the colonial
connotations of the relationship between the
East and the West. These connotations are most
evident in themes such as Orientalism and its
relationship to Chinoiserie, an 18th century
aesthetic trend in which elements of Chinese
design were recreated in relation to European
aesthetics and tastes.
“I attempt to re-imagine and reclaim ideas
and designs associated with Chinoiserie, which
have in the past had problematic colonial
undertones. Cultural designs are shared as
opposed to appropriated, it is no longer about
one culture being moulded to the demands
of another.
I’m intrigued by the crossover of ideas,
creatures and anthropomorphism that exists in
these Chinese and Medieval bestiaries. There’s
something intriguing about this shared desire
to understand and give meaning to these real
and imagined ‘beasts’.
This whole avenue of research ultimately
evolved from exploring my Chinese-
Singaporean family’s relationship with
Christianity and how that has impacted my
understanding and exposure to certain aspects
of Chinese culture, overtime it has evolved into
something more playful and peculiar.”

Hannah Lim Ornamental Mythologies at
Edinburgh Printmakers, Castle Mills,
1 Dundee Street EH3 9FP
Tuesday to Sunday 10am to 6pm
edinburghprintmakers.co.uk

CELEBRATING EDINBURGH
6 - 29 OCTOBER
Scottish Art Club
24 Rutland Square EH1 2BW

THIS EXHIBITION presents work
by Laura Gressani, John Heywood,
Cat Outram & Kelly Stewart inspired
by Edinburgh. The four artists are
printmakers and have consistently
found inspiration in the City’s
architecture and landscapes.
The exhibition offers a tour of the
City as much as a tour of the various
printmaking techniques they use,
including: etching, screenprinting,
lithography and monoprinting.
The exhibition also includes some
original drawings.
Kelly Stewart was attracted to
Edinburgh by its architecture and she
delights in depicting the different
“villages” of Edinburgh with their
particular styles. She presents
screenprints and original drawings.
Cat Outram has lived in Edinburgh
most of her life and has made the
City her main source of inspiration.
Her etchings sometimes present the
City as it sits in the surrounding
landscape, other times drilling down
to the domestic view from her window.
John Heywood has been a
printmaker for over 40 years,
specialising in etching. He believes that
etching helps him to capture the mood
and texture of the City.
Laura Gressani likes the contrast
between the formal architecture of the
New Town and the pockets of nature
within it, using monoprinting and
etching to capture it.

The exhibition is open to the public
Tuesday to Saturday 10.30am to 4.30pm.
http://www.scottishartsclub.com

Take a grand


tour with the


Scottish Art Club


A TRIBUTE TO the achievements of
the internationally renowned designer
Dorothy Hogg, MBE, is included in
Elements, the exhibition of gold, silver
and jewellery from 28-30 October at
Lyon & Turnbull.
The exhibition includes Goldsmiths’
Craft and Design Council (GC&DC)
award-winning work from across
the years.
The magnificent Fair Game vases, by
Fred Rich, who was described by the
judges of the 2021 Jacques Cartier
Memorial Award as the world’s greatest
ever art-enameller, will also be displayed.

The vases show plant life of the British
Isles with a particular reference to
Scotland as well as 41 birds of 25 types.
They stand 51cm high, took thousands
of hours to create and use over 100
metres of 22ct gold cloisonné wire.
It’s the first time the vases, and an
exhibition of GC&DC winners, have been
exhibited in Scotland.

Elements, Scotland’s annual festival of
jewellery, silver and gold runs from 28-
October is organised by The Scottish
Goldsmiths Trust in partnership with Lyon
& Turnbull fine art auctioneers.

WHAT’S ON AT THE QUEEN’S HALL...


1 Oct: Calum Scott
6 Oct: Joby Burgess -
A Percussionist's
Songbook
8 Oct: Newton Faulkner
10 Oct: Last Podcast on
the Left
13 Oct: GZA - 25 Years of
Liquid Swords
14 Oct: Al Stewart
Greatest Hits Live

15 Oct: Leo Sayer -
The Show Must Go On
19 Oct: Samantha Fish
20 Oct: An Evening With
Adam Frost
22 Oct: Clearwater
Creedence Revival
23 Oct: John Cale
28 Oct: Wishbone Ash
29 Oct: Howard Jones

Singaporean-British
artist Hannah Lim
Free download pdf