Roger Hardy - Suffolk artist
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Thursday, 22 July 2021

TURNING TIDE




Looking forward to the opening of Turning Tide in association with Britten Pears Arts and Devi Singh.

1st -31st August at the Dovecote studio, Snape Maltings.


“Roger Hardy is one of the lucky sculptors who seems to live and work in his perfect environment, he has stated wisely that the answer always lies in nature and in this work we see the dialogue between the natural world and Hardy’s studio. To-ing and fro-ing, drawing on ancient themes and dealing with contemporary mores. Hardy’s work feels personal, he is processing his life and times through his natural medium. And still, he leaves room for us to see our own story within his telling. Roger Hardy has a wonderful sustainable modus operandi all he needs are big skies and plenty of driftwood in the mud. All power to him”.

Nicola Hicks 2021.


 

Sunday, 11 July 2021

TURNING TIDE exhibition





 I am looking forward to the Turning Tide exhibition at The Dovecote studio, Snape Maltings. In association with Britten Pears Arts and Devi Singh.

Hosted by Internationally-renowned and prestigious Snape Maltings Concert Hall, this exhibition takes place in the unique Dovecote Studio and is a collaboration between Britten Pears Arts and Devi Singh

Turning Tide is a reflective body of sculptural works that symbolise the artist’s journey and connection to place and environment, and is his first solo exhibition at this major International institution. 
Emanating from nature, Hardy’s gnarled, ethereal figures, exquisitely carved from sea-worn-wood, not only alert us to this decaying, wastefully discarded material but also hold an echo of our own human fragility. This feeling of belonging, identity and place became very relevant to the artist during the last year of lockdowns.

Hardy sees his work as “Reflecting the movement of cultures across the seas, whether though active migration or displacement. The wood washed up on our shores is a metaphor for this. Many woods not being native to our shores have been on quite a journey to arrive. Each with a story to tell.”

"The element that separates good art from the mere decorative is that intangible,  transformative quality. It’s hard to put you finger on exactly what this is but I do know that it emerges from seeing, or should I say experiencing, a great exhibition a richer person than before you entered and much of this transformation is that you now look at the world around you through a different prism. 


Roger’s work has this effect on me. His haunting figures, mere suggestions of human forms, are timeless. They evoke the biblical era and yet have the modernity of a Henry Moore. Drift wood caught on the oceans currents, smoothed by decades of natures sanding transforming into a scene of a present day migrant floating optimistically towards a better life with nothing to his name but the shirt on his back".


Vanessa Branson 2021. Writer and founder of the Marrakech Biennale



“Roger Hardy is one of the lucky sculptors who seems to live and work in his perfect environment, he has stated wisely that the answer always lies in nature and in this work we see the dialogue between the natural world and Hardy’s studio. To-ing and fro-ing, drawing on ancient themes and dealing with contemporary mores. Hardy’s work feels personal, he is processing his life and times through his natural medium. And still, he leaves room for us to see our own story within his telling. Roger Hardy has a wonderful sustainable modus operandi all he needs are big skies and plenty of driftwood in the mud. All power to him”.

Nicola Hicks 2021

Sunday, 20 June 2021

Tribal mask. (detail). A recent sculpture using found wood.





 

Monday, 3 May 2021

EXHIBITIONS

 Now working hard for two exhibitions on the horizon. Sculptures with combined wood and plaster. Using the fine days to gather wood on the turning tide.




Saturday, 20 February 2021

NEW WORK

I am starting to use a combination of plaster and found wood in my work.
This is a new way of working for me and exciting to explore how the running themes express themselves in this way. The long lockdown has offered an opportunity to open up new ways of working. Take some risks. Its the best way to move forward.




 

Sunday, 24 January 2021

CAVE PAINTING SCULPTURES

I have started working on a series of sculptures inspired by the recent discovery of the oldest known cave drawing in Indonesia. The 'Wild pig'.
I am working in plaster, trying to capture the elemental and earthly embodiment of the animals represented. I want them to have the movement and feel of being raised from the ground. The earth pigments they used were after all from the ground.

The idea is to have some of them cast in bronze.



Wild Pig. 2021

Horse. 2021

Bull. 2021

 

Sunday, 10 January 2021

NEW WORK 2021

Happy new year. Hope his one will be better than last.

I have started working hard in the studio with a number of ideas in flux.

Below is a new work that is in progress. Combining plaster and found wood. I wanted to create a radiating energy with he way the wood is combined. Ray of hope in this uncertain world at the moment.

 


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