Accession No

2023.27


Description

Pen and wash drawing on paper, 'Old man feeding a dragon', by Tony Phillips, 2020. Part of 'Civilisations', a series of artworks which link contemporary life in Britain with ethnographic collections and respond to collections and displays at MAA, the Fitzwilliam Museum and the British Museum.


Place

Europe; Northern Europe; British Isles; United Kingdom; Great Britain; England; Cambridgeshire; Cambridge


Period

21st century


Source

Phillips, Tony [artist and lender]


Department

Anth


Reference Numbers

2023.27; MAA: MN0223.3


Cultural Affliation


Material

Paper; Pigment


Local Term


Measurements

575mm x 460mm


Events

Loan (Loan In)
Andrews Gallery and Maudslay Hall, 16/9/2020 to 16/02/2022, Civilisations
Event Date 16/9/2020
Author: rachel hand


Description (Physical description)
Pen and wash drawing on paper, 'Old man feeding a dragon', by Tony Philips, 2020.
Event Date 24/9/2020
Author: rachel hand


Context (Production / use)
Part of 'Civilisations' by British artist Tony Phillips, a series of graphic works, painted panels, and sculpted reliefs which link contemporary life in Britain with ethnographic collections. Through a survey of museum collections/displays at MAA, the Fitzwilliam Museum and the British Museum) Philips has developed a series of images into visual narratives linking ideas, motifs, and beliefs across the full range of human civilisations. The narratives are a mixture of motifs from museum objects, humans – both as historical participants and as contemporary museum spectators -, and the wider context of Britain in the 21st century. Decoration, ritual, hierarchy, power, myth, veneration , abound in the imagery of museum artefacts and resonate with the imagery which permeates the world of the contemporary museum visitor.

These principal themes are: patterns of similarity in the role of motifs, and their shared vitality; the nature of artefacts transformed by becoming museum objects (used , rediscovered, institutionalised); sacred and hand-crafted imagery in the context of the mass-produced imagery of the 21st century; artefacts as embellishment of life

The Museum interventions will be exhibited amongst existing MAA museum displays as fragments of sacred text where images on paper, are displayed as 'relics' of an original text, as fragments of altarpieces – painted wood panels displayed as 'relics' on walls and as 'stone' reliefs – bas-relief texts displayed as 'relics'.

The artworks were produced at the artist's home and studio in Italy
Event Date 24/9/2020
Author: rachel hand


FM:287886

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