Venue
One Paved Court
Starts
Monday, September 2, 2024
Ends
Sunday, September 8, 2024
Address
1 Paved Court, Richmond TW9 1LZ
Location
London
Organiser
White Noise Projects

TRACES is the joint title for two solo exhibitions running concurrently at One Paved Court in September. Printmaker Loraine Monk presents a body of work tracing the history of social dissent and protest on the ground floor, while Rachel Pearcey kicks over the traces with her textile works in the upper gallery.

Loraine Monk creates images using both relief and etching processes, using the act of cutting to make tactile, the visceral anger of inequality and political disengagement. Her family were working-class Londoners; inspired by local and community history, her background has influenced her politics, academic research and artistic practice.  She has exhibited in a number of independent galleries, museums and group shows, including the International Original Print Exhibition, the Society of Women Artists, New English Art Club, Printmakers Council and Woolwich Contemporary Print Fair.

Rachel Pearcey loves textiles and stitching and drawing and making things.  She stitches drawings and words onto second-hand, vintage or antique linen, cotton or flax. She creates unbreakable cups and bowls, teapots and jugs with felt, wool and linen. Softened with years of wear, faded, repaired and darned each piece she uses bears traces of a previous, often now redundant, life. Recycling is very important to her, as she says “the thread with which I sew is the only thing I buy new”.  Her work was selected for this year’s Summer Exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts and has been widely shown across the UK and internationally.

TRACES is part of a series of exhibitions hosted by White Noise Projects, a group of emerging and mid-career artists who showcase meticulously chosen artworks through a series of group and solo exhibitions.

Established in 2017 by mixed media artist Hanna ten Doornkaat and painter Annamarie Dzendrowskyj the collective curates exhibitions centred around themes pertinent to contemporary artistic practice, and in response to exhibition spaces that surpass the idea of the white cube.