New body of work from Barnaby Barford on view at David Gill Gallery
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, September 14, 2025


New body of work from Barnaby Barford on view at David Gill Gallery
The Tiger by Barnaby Barford.



LONDON.- One year on from the auspicious residency of Barnaby Barford’s The Tower of Babel (2015) at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, David Gill Gallery announces a new body of work from the artist, including the first exhibition of his works on paper.

Have more, buy more, do better, move forward, grow, succeed, win. Barford’s installation ME WANT NOW offers a metaphorical narrative on the dominance of this ideology and debates our values in an increasingly polarised political landscape. The world moves forward at a never-ending pace driven by the powerful desires of the individual feeding the engine of the ‘me first’ culture. But, understood hegemonies are in flux. Uncertainty promotes fear. This in turn triggers an animalistic selfpreservation instinct in us.

The exhibition compels the viewer to question our relationships and the world around us. Large scale energetic Word Drawings, offer a departure from the meticulous planning, order and structure of Barford’s sculptural works. These Word Drawings embody the chaotic immediacy and almost forceful nature of the ‘me first’ mentality and act as the voice of the powerful, trapping us by offering things that ‘we’ want now, with no regard for the consequences. The drawings appear deranged but also serene and beautiful and form claustrophobic ‘nets’ that envelop a series of life-size animal sculptures and Trophy Heads. Repetition is carried through to these sculptures which are constructed from thousands of individual ceramic pieces featuring fragments of the Word Drawings.

‘More’, ‘Power’, ‘Change’, ‘Choice’,’Hope’, ‘Glory’, ‘Greatness’ – These are the emotions that have often driven mankind to achieve great things, words that are inherently positive, however once repeated incessantly, their meaning becomes warped. It is the egocentric pursuit of these bastions dominating the current climate which has driven this body of work. Barford says: “it feels like words have never been so important – those written in the press, posted across social media and in speeches from our politicians, in volatile times words can be dangerous.”

At the heart of ME WANT NOW is a series of life-size ceramic sculptures, a queue of animals lining up patiently waiting. Seemingly powerful creatures alongside the vulnerable from the 8ft Polar Bear to the Rabbit. The queue places them all side-by-side, powerless as they wait for the unknown, a visual allegory of human existence. A series of Trophy Heads in a separate room, featuring the ceramic animal heads mounted on mirrored plaques may suggest the future of the waiting animals, offering a disturbing sense of doom. Barford once again employs the mirror to both physically and metaphorically present us with an uncomfortable glimpse of ourselves reflected in the work.

Barford quotes: “Individually the words I have chosen are positive as are the pieces in isolation, it is in their relationship to each other and ultimately the installation as a whole that drives the narrative of the exhibition. Fear promotes the ‘me first’ culture, the disregard of consequences and the collateral damage that ensues seems to be eroding our sense of collective humanity.”

Barford goes onto ask: ”In the face of our insatiable need for more, and the resulting constant sense of discontent, is this what we really want?”










Today's News

November 18, 2016

Archaeologists discover that Mexican pyramid built like a 'Russian nesting doll'

Experts challenge Van Gogh Museum on 'lost' notebook

Exhibition of early works by Mario Merz on view at Gladstone Gallery

Nelson-Atkins acquires Armenian masterwork

Rediscovered sketch for Constable masterpiece offered at Bonhams Old Master Sale

Krannert Art Museum show brings together medieval manuscript collections

Shanghai Science and Technology Museum's planetarium designed by Ennead Architects breaks ground

Balanced and of high quality: Cologne Fine Art with a top class offering

Helen Marten wins the first Hepworth Prize for Sculpture

Solo exhibition by the Chinese artist Liu Bolin opens at Klein Sun Gallery

World's earliest 10 Commandments tablet sold for $850,000 by Heritage Auctions

Lisson Gallery presents new oil paintings and a series of silver cast works by Jason Martin

Max Ernst painting from the faamily of Dorothea Tanning sells for $1 million at Bonhams

New York City artist captures light in Garment District

A rare and historic parcel label addressed to RMS Titanic for sale at Mossgreen Auctions

Art In General announces that Director Anne Barlow will join Tate St. Ives in early 2017

Whyte's to offer a further portion of the private collection from the late George and Maura McClelland

A "Grand" commitment makes history at the Memorial Art Gallery

New body of work from Barnaby Barford on view at David Gill Gallery

Berry Campbell Gallery exhibits paintings and works on paper by Abstract Expressionist Jon Schueler

rodolphe janssen opens exhibition of new paintings by Sayre Gomez

John Ford Clymer paintings are top lots of Leslie Hindman's Arts of the American West sale

At Iraq's Nimrud, remnants of fabled city IS sought to destroy




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful