Vignettes comprises a new series of small-scale bronzes, each a world unto itself. The works are positioned on the gallery floor, as if just left there – abandoned like a child's toys. Their scale is childlike too, transforming Aird's Lane into a seemingly vast universe populated by animals, plants, household objects and fruit.
Some of Fischer's poetic scenes have fantastical origins, emerging from dreams or else coincidences of their production in the studio, while others developed from quotidian or domestic moments – the odd collisions and combinations that happen in life. One approach that links them together is their unlikely combining of two objects, often in divergent styles. Amongst the pieces are a quixotic Playmobil knight with a mishappen companion, a metal rose held by a rough-hewn humanoid, and a snake curled around a plain chair. Shifting states, and various forms of growth and decay, thread through these various tchotchke-like sculptures which commune around a centrally placed miniature Murano glass chandelier.
There is a humour to the required engagement with the exhibition. With everything installed at ground level, viewers must look down or bend over to take in the works. They aren't on plinths being presented as moral exemplars, like a public monument. Key to Fischer's practice is a questioning of hierarchies – our relationship to 'the real' and the everyday, the permanent and impermanent, the serious and whimsical. In utilising bronze in this series, what initially appears fanciful and impermanent has in fact been built to last, forming a key element of the show's antic atmosphere.
Press release courtesy The Modern Institute
3 Aird's Lane
Glasgow, G1 5HU
United Kingdom
www.themoderninstitute.com
+44 141 237 1488
Mon - Fri, 11am - 5pm
Sat, 12pm - 5pm