Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Marguerite Horner

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Artist

Website
  
Marguerite Horner [1]

Marguerite Horner Marguerite Horner contemporary british painting

Marguerite Horner (born in Lincoln ) says of her work “my paintings aim to investigate, among other things, notions of transience, intimacy, loss and hope.” Marguerite is a representational painter whose work presents us with snapshots of the seemingly mundane: an unexceptional window at the top of a residential building, a sliver of dual carriageway in profile, a petrol station, a rundown shop in a tired suburban street, or a solitary woodland walker. The very banality of these scenes suggests that they have nothing to hide. Yet, in almost every instance, what would ordinarily be the focal point of a painting is either obscured or omitted altogether. In many cases, the obscurant takes over as the focus. We are not looking at a view, but what adheres our ability to discover that view......Ms. Horner paints in monochrome. Occasionally, a fragment of color creeps in like a slash of muted cherry red on a car or a hint of pale blue in a cloud. However, that too, severs our reconciliation of the scene. It serves to augment the overall colorlessness, not to contradict it. The imposing, almost overwhelming chiaroscuro of her early paintings has softened lately, but a sense of the uncanny remains. There is a strong feeling that the narrative is being played out elsewhere, that we are missing something and perhaps willfully so. It is unsettling. Constantly, one feels the urge to look over the shoulder. A threat looms. It is a closed narrative, a Hitchcockian tale. In 2011 Horner exhibited at the 54th Venice Biennale in ‘Afternoon Tea‘ with WW Gallery and received her first London solo exhibition ‘The Seen and Unseen’‘ in 2012 at The Pitzhanger Manor Gallery in London. Her work has been acquired by a number of art museums including Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Falmouth Art Gallery, The Madison Museum of Fine Art, Rugby Art Gallery and Museum, Schneider Museum of Art, Sheffield City Art Gallery and Swindon Art Gallery.

Contents

Marguerite Horner Marguerite Horner contemporary british painting

Selected solo exhibitions

Marguerite Horner Marguerite Horner contemporary british painting

  • “Through each Today" The Crypt, St Marylebone Parish Church, London (2013)
  • “The Seen and Unseen” Pitzhanger Manor, London (2012)
  • “Marguerite Horner: Paintings” Usher Gallery, Lincoln (2006)
  • “Marguerite Horner: Paintings” Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield (2006)
  • Selected group exhibitions

    Marguerite Horner Marguerite Horner Interview Painters39 Table

  • “Contemporary British Watercolours” Burton Art Gallery & Museum, Devon (2016)
  • “Contemporary British Watercolours” The Oriel Gallery, Ballinskelligs, Co. Kerry (2015)
  • “Contemporary British Watercolours” Maidstone Museum & Bentlif Art Gallery, Kent (2015)
  • “Rugby Collection 2015” Rugby Art Gallery and Museum (2015)
  • “Brentwood Stations of The Cross” Brentwood Cathedral (2015)
  • “Present Tense” Swindon Art Gallery (2015)
  • “@PaintBritain” Ipswich Art School Gallery, Ipswich (2014)
  • “Contemporary British Painting” The Crypt St Marylebone Parish Church, London (2014)
  • “Contemporary British Painting” Huddersfield Art Gallery (2014)
  • “In The City” The Lion and Lamb Gallery, London (2011)
  • “The MacGuffin” WW Gallery, London (2005)
  • “Mirage of Mind” Century Gallery, London (2005)
  • Selected collections

  • Abbot Hall Art Gallery
  • Falmouth Art Gallery
  • Madison Museum of Fine Art
  • Rugby Art Gallery and Museum
  • Swindon Art Gallery



  • Marguerite Horner d38we5ntdyxyjecloudfrontnet1381profileavatar

    References

    Marguerite Horner Wikipedia