Method B

Method B

15th Apr 2010 - 20th Apr 2010

Preview Thurs 15th 6-8pm.
Open 10-6pm daily

Six Memos presents Method B, a solo exhibition by Karl Burke curated by Mary Conlon, Shinnors scholar, LCGA.

Following on from Method A in Rua Red, in Method B Karl continues to dissect the scientific logic that informs his work.
Studies on the elemental forms of nature and the attempt to replicate its patterns are here used as the blueprint for artistic production. Coupled with observations of the infra-ordinary, the exhibition is explicitly playful, a subtraction of weight, a renegotiation of the adapted joinery space. Photography, video and sculptural interventions play with the versatility of possible interpretations and with our willingness to believe in the authority of theoretical propositions.

Six Memos presents Method B, a solo exhibition by Karl Burke curated by Mary Conlon, Shinnors scholar, LCGA. Following on from Method A in Rua Red, in Method B Karl continues to dissect the scientific logic that informs his work. Studies on the elemental forms of nature and the attempt to replicate its patterns are here used as the blueprint for artistic production. Coupled with observations of the infra-ordinary, the exhibition is explicitly playful, a subtraction of weight, a renegotiation of the adapted joinery space. Photography, video and sculptural interventions play with the versatility of possible interpretations and with our willingness to believe in the authority of theoretical propositions.Six Memos presents Method B, a solo exhibition by Karl Burke curated by Mary Conlon, Shinnors scholar, LCGA. Following on from Method A in Rua Red, in Method B Karl continues to dissect the scientific logic that informs his work. Studies on the elemental forms of nature and the attempt to replicate its patterns are here used as the blueprint for artistic production. Coupled with observations of the infra-ordinary, the exhibition is explicitly playful, a subtraction of weight, a renegotiation of the adapted joinery space. Photography, video and sculptural interventions play with the versatility of possible interpretations and with our willingness to believe in the authority of theoretical propositions.
Six Memos presents Method B, a solo exhibition by Karl Burke curated by Mary Conlon, Shinnors scholar, LCGA. Following on from Method A in Rua Red, in Method B Karl continues to dissect the scientific logic that informs his work. Studies on the elemental forms of nature and the attempt to replicate its patterns are here used as the blueprint for artistic production. Coupled with observations of the infra-ordinary, the exhibition is explicitly playful, a subtraction of weight, a renegotiation of the adapted joinery space. Photography, video and sculptural interventions play with the versatility of possible interpretations and with our willingness to believe in the authority of theoretical propositions.Six Memos presents Method B, a solo exhibition by Karl Burke curated by Mary Conlon, Shinnors scholar, LCGA. Following on from Method A in Rua Red, in Method B Karl continues to dissect the scientific logic that informs his work. Studies on the elemental forms of nature and the attempt to replicate its patterns are here used as the blueprint for artistic production. Coupled with observations of the infra-ordinary, the exhibition is explicitly playful, a subtraction of weight, a renegotiation of the adapted joinery space. Photography, video and sculptural interventions play with the versatility of possible interpretations and with our willingness to believe in the authority of theoretical propositions.Six Memos presents Method B, a solo exhibition by Karl Burke curated by Mary Conlon, Shinnors scholar, LCGA. Following on from Method A in Rua Red, in Method B Karl continues to dissect the scientific logic that informs his work. Studies on the elemental forms of nature and the attempt to replicate its patterns are here used as the blueprint for artistic production. Coupled with observations of the infra-ordinary, the exhibition is explicitly playful, a subtraction of weight, a renegotiation of the adapted joinery space. Photography, video and sculptural interventions play with the versatility of possible interpretations and with our willingness to believe in the authority of theoretical propositions.