press release

Inspired by family photo albums and family relationships, New Works by Trish Morrissey features photographs and video work created over a two-year period.

In a series of elaborately staged portraits, Morrissey worked closely with her elder sister to impersonate family members (both real and imagined) and re-enact memories familiar to all of us - childhood birthdays or holidays at the seaside. The resulting series of colour photographs is titled Seven Years, referring to the age gap between Morrissey and her sister. She made the images at her former family home, using old clothes found in her parents' attic or searching second hand shops for the perfect prop, to meticulously recreate the atmosphere of the seventies and eighties. In contrast to most family photos, the people in her images rarely smile, allowing the viewer to concentrate on the gestures and body language which reveal hidden tensions between family members. They are at once nostalgic and unsettling.

Accompanying the photographs are two new video works. In the bittersweet Eighteen and Forty Five, two women wearing a wedding dress (whose faces we never see) dance in the harsh surroundings of a suburban back yard, whilst Eleven and Three Quarters shows a small boy chasing an elusive rabbit round a garden. Both pieces evoke a sense of yearning - a feeling of not quite being able to grasp oneĀ¹s dreams.

Trish Morrissey was born in Dublin, 1967, and lives and works in London. She has exhibited extensively in the UK including at the National Portrait Gallery, London as part of the prestigious John Kobal Portrait Award. She has shown internationally in group-shows in Vienna, Sao Paulo and Paris amongst others.

Pressetext

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Trish Morrissey
New Works