Throne by Marie-Therese
1991
Polychrome wood and brass
92 x 74 x 71 cm
Certificate of Authenticity
Artist Statement
Marie-Thérèse Ross explores the hidden workings of the mind, focussing on states of physical, emotional and psychological transformation. These transformations can occur naturally, as well as those impacted by the nature of the outside world and its effect on our personal inner worlds.
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Her work appears humorous as well as darkly subversive, as she seems to hide herself in plain sight. She seeks to both reveal and hide awkward personal experiences including childhood memories, episodes that reflect on her sense of vulnerability and mortality. She creates installations that focus on domestic interiors with anthropomorphic furniture and trapped giant black birds. Birds are often used symbolically in art history and Ross adds her layer
of personal symbolism. Her birds are disruptive and noisy, they represent the exterior world, whereas the furniture seems to move silently, reflecting the more vulnerable and fragile inner core. By focusing on the personal interior versus the outside world, Ross grapples with themes and ideas that include feminism, childhood, mortality, the body, displacement and the human condition..
Her work might hang on the wall, lean, or sit between wall and floor, or move completely into the physical space of the viewer. In a recent solo show at The Stone Space in London, she incorporated her sculptures into an atmospheric installation with accompanying music creating an immersive environment.
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Her sculptures are made of a combination of laminated wood parts. Using found objects which are integrated and sublimated into the works with carved and painted up-cycled wood, colour adds another layer of expression and meaning to the whole. The mass of wood echoes the drawn and cut-out lines found in her drawings and
collages, lending itself well to her process of working. Dowels join and secure pieces together, often left exposed rather than smoothed away and hidden. Surfaces are not polished, the grain of the wood is left visible, and the process of making is revealed.Artist Bio
Marie-Thérèse Ross MRSS is a member of The Royal Society of Sculptors. She is an Art Gemini Prize winner (2021), and her work is featured in Flux Review #7. Her work has been exhibited at the Royal Cambrian Academy, The Stone Space, APT Deptford, and in 2022 she was commissioned by Camden to design posters for the newly restored Swiss Cottage Library.
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Ross was awarded a First Class BA Hons in painting from Loughborough College of Art and Design, she went on to study sculpture in Germany for a year at Karlsruhe Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden Künste with the British sculptor Michael Sandle RA. She studied sculpture for her MA at the University of Pennsylvania in the USA.