Spent Match
Edition of 40
Painted bronze
0.2 x 0.2 x 3 cms
2005
A bronze cast of a used match painted to look real.
A miniature echo of Burnt Out, this match was used to start the fire. Its sulphur is used up and the tiny tool discarded.
The simple tool used to start a fire, Turk’s bronze spent matches tells a story of life and early civilisation but also of destruction, fire-starters and revolutionaries. But the life of these matches has come to an end. Their purpose fulfilled, they have been discarded as waste - symbols relating to fire but also of fires which have burnt out. And yet this tiny piece of detritus, so easy to overlook on the street, has been cast in bronze. Something fragile, ephemeral and worthless has been transformed at the hand of Turk into something solid and permanent, containing within it both hidden value and hidden meaning.
Exhibitions
- Burnt Out - Kunsthaus Baselland, 2008
- Last Year in Eggenberg (The Paradise Show) - Schloss Eggenberg, 2006
- GT - Jablonka Maruani Mercier Gallery, 2016
- The Fabricated Object - Sumarria Lunn Gallery, 2012
- The Art of Not Making - Ha Gamle Prestegard, 2013
- Pense Bête - LARMgalleri, 2014
- Turkish Tulips - Museum Van Loon, 2017
- Who What When Where How and Why - Newport Street Gallery, 2016
- Wittgenstein’s Dream - Freud Museum, 2015
- Yard - CCA Andratx, 2015
- Turkish Tulips - The Bowes Museum, 2017
Essays
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Trompe L'oeil - Rikke Hansen
SHOW
Trompe L'oeil - Rikke Hansen
Like the carefully staged crime scene, trompe l’œil tricks the viewer through the arrangement of misleading appearances and false clues. Literally meaning ‘cheat the eye’, the art technique involves the realistic depiction of phenomena to create optical illusions, often turning flat surfaces into seemingly three-dimensional objects. Trompe l’œil art does not belong to a particular ism or medium but slips in and out of focus through the ages, depending on dominant regimes of representation.
Although the term was not coined until the early 1800s, the genre can be traced back to Greek and Roman times. The Roman writer Pliny the Elder writes of a rivalry in ancient Greece between the painters Zeuxis and Parrhasius, both accomplished in this particular art. Largely forgotten during the Middle Ages, the technique was given a new lease of life by the Italian Renaissance and the era’s advanced understanding of perspective, while painters of the Baroque era applied it to the then increasingly popular genre of still life. Artists of the Modern period, however, made limited use of trompe l’œil, as works no longer strived towards illusion or imitation but were made to investigate the grounds for art’s own existence. Nonetheless, a few