Artists > 2012: Flights of Fancy > Jamie Shovlin

Jamie Shovlin Rough Cut/Cut Rough (Hiker Meat) photo: Thierry Bal

Jamie Shovlin Rough Cut/Cut Rough (Hiker Meat) photo: Thierry Bal

Work

Jamie Shovlin’s Rough Cut/Cut Rough (Hiker Meat) used Tatton’s Tower Wood as a site for more of the folly and imagination its original designers envisaged. The Tower, historically understood to have been constructed to allow for a clear viewing point of sheep (and dubbed ‘the Sheep Stealer’s Tower’) was, in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, employed as an amusement for guests of the Mansion; encouraged, after a meal, to stroll the gardens and be ‘terrified’ by a mad hermit who lived in the Tower. Shovlin’s addition to the Gardens was a shed. Within, something wicked resided. It was unclear what, exactly, was taking place, but there was a feeling for all who visited of definite unease. Flickering light came from within and sounds of distress could be heard around the structure. But, for those who chose to come close enough to rigorously examine, the abandoned shed looked all too recently left and suggested that the orchestrator of horror was not too far from home. Transforming these beautiful, easily grasped gardens into a site of fear was paramount to a work that invited visitors to ponder ‘the natural’ as a space for titillating terror.



Biography

Jamie Shovlin is interested in the tension between truth and fiction, reality and invention, history and memory. He is an artist whose work combines extraordinary facility as a draughtsman, printmaker, painter and writer with conceptual complexity and playfulness.

His painstakingly researched and executed works merge inherently flawed systems, pseudo-scientific exactitude and doubtful philosophical propositions with the seemingly objective experience of the archive. Through his projects Shovlin questions how information becomes authoritative and explores the way that we map and classify the world in order to understand it.


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WEEKENDS

The work was operational weekends and bank holidays.