DORSET.- Acting as a deeply poignant and provocative counterblast to TV cookery shows, colour supplement recipes and Instagram plate pics, Mat Collishaw: Last Meal on Death Row, Texas is an unsettling exhibition that sees ordinary, somewhat banal choices become charged with dark moral and psychological questions.
The exhibition is composed of thirteen hyper-realistic paintings and photographs depicting the final meals requested by named inmates awaiting their imminent executions in the United States of America.
The work powerfully creates a meeting point between documentary impulse and painterly tradition, transforming mundane comfort food into objects of profound contemplative weight.
The subjects are deceptively ordinary - fried chicken, hamburgers, pecan pie, sweet tea but rendered with the lush attention to surface and light associated with Dutch Golden Age still life painting from the 17th century. Collishaws deliberate art historical framing of the contemporary subject matter is central to the exhibition's emotional intensity.
Collishaw draws upon the vanitas tradition - in which abundant food and fine objects served as memento mori reminders of mortality - and creates a brutal contemporary echo. Where 17th century painters used rotting fruit to suggest life's transience, Collishaw uses a dish of ripe fruit, including a peach, orange and apples, as ordered by Cornelius Gross hours before his death.
One of the exhibitions most famous pieces is the choice of Jonathan Nobles, who fasted and requested only a communion wafer and wine.
In all thirteen pictures, Collishaw refuses to sensationalise. Or contextualise. There are no victims, no perpetrators, no crime scene imagery. Only food, rendered with extraordinary detail and artistic tenderness. With each image, the viewer is simply left knowing what each meal represents; a final act of agency, perhaps the last moment of simple pleasure available to someone about to be put to death for committing murder. Each meal is imbued with the Old Testament principle of retribution.
The exhibition raises uncomfortable questions about capital punishment, the ritualised nature of execution, and what it means to grant a condemned man his choice of a final meal. Last Meal on Death Row, Texas is at once a meditation on mortality, a critique of the American penal system, and a deeply humanising act.
Matt Collishaw says My Last Meal on Death Row series examines the strange collision between the ordinary and the irreversible. These are the final meals requested by prisoners before execution: familiar, often humble objects of comfort, transformed by the knowledge of what follows. A cheeseburger becomes almost sacred in appearance because of how it is composed, lit and framed. Contemporary fast food takes on the solemnity of 17th-century Dutch Vanitas painting. What might otherwise seem banal is charged with mortality, ritual and judgment. The meal becomes a still life in the most literal sense: a final arrangement before extinction.
Liz Gilmore, CEO of The Sherborne says: The Sherborne is the new home to the arts, in the South West. We aim to inspire curiosity by offering a vibrant cultural programme that is locally and nationally significant. Collishaws beautiful, poignant works remind us of the role of art and its ability to shock, surprise and delight in equal measure, and ultimately, in understanding what it is to be human. We are thrilled to put them on show in our Red and Green Georgian rooms, in juxtaposition with wider themes of storytelling and mythmaking.