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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level H , Case PD, Shelf 126

Gaze

Drawing
2006-2007 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Siân Bowen (born 1959) is an artist who has made drawing her primary practice. Her work extends the definition of the term drawing and involves techniques such as layering, piercing and cutting found and treated papers. Bowen was artist-in-residence with the word and Image Department and Paper Conservation Studio for 18 months in 2006-7. In the course of her residency she made a series of drawings inspired by the collections and intended as the centre-piece of a display, Sian Bowen: Drawing, Context and the Collection (14 February-28 May 2007).

Amongst the material studied in the V&A collections was the Harry S. Parkes collection of Japanese papers, amassed around 1870 in Japan. This prompted Bowen to research historic but now-vanishing treatments of paper and to acquire such papers to use in her drawings. For Gaze she used persimmon-treated paper (which has reddish-brown colouring and is waterproof), indigo papers dip-dyed up to nine times (giving them a dense colour and purplish bloom) as well as papers brushed with clay; she also worked with materials such as vellum. She had been intrigued by the potential of the Claude Glass (an 18th -century drawing aid) which she had seen in the British Galleries, so she commissioned a replica which she used to study and draw from selected objects in the collection, in particular a harlequinade - a small folding book telling the story of Cinderella. For Bowen this object was analogous to a folding tea house she had seen and been captivated by on a visit to Japan in spring 2006.

This drawing is one of three acquired by the Museum following the artist's residency. They show the central themes of Bowen's residency and represent the range of materials and techniques that she used. Designed to be seen unframed, suspended and lit from behind, these drawings are exquisitely beautiful; they embody the achievements and insights of the residency, melding art and craft.


Object details

Category
Object type
Titles
  • Gaze (series title)
  • Gaze: no. 9 (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Drawing
Brief description
Drawing, laser-cut brown paper, Gaze: no. 9, from the 'Gaze' series, Sian Bowen, England, 2006
Physical description
Drawing from Gaze, laser cut brown paper, 62.6 x 45.4 cm.
Dimensions
  • Height: 62.6cm
  • Width: 46.6cm
Style
Production typeUnique
Marks and inscriptions
  • One hole in top right corner and one hole in top left corner used to suspend object in original display.
  • 'Sian Bowen 2006' (Inscribed on in graphite in bottom right corner of verso )
Credit line
Given by Siân Bowen
Object history
Given to the Museum, along with E.22-2007 and E.24-2007, by Sian Bowen in 2007.
Historical context
The work is one of three given to the V&A by Sian Bowen in 2007. They were produced as part of the artist's 18 month residency between 2006 and 2007.
Summary
Siân Bowen (born 1959) is an artist who has made drawing her primary practice. Her work extends the definition of the term drawing and involves techniques such as layering, piercing and cutting found and treated papers. Bowen was artist-in-residence with the word and Image Department and Paper Conservation Studio for 18 months in 2006-7. In the course of her residency she made a series of drawings inspired by the collections and intended as the centre-piece of a display, Sian Bowen: Drawing, Context and the Collection (14 February-28 May 2007).

Amongst the material studied in the V&A collections was the Harry S. Parkes collection of Japanese papers, amassed around 1870 in Japan. This prompted Bowen to research historic but now-vanishing treatments of paper and to acquire such papers to use in her drawings. For Gaze she used persimmon-treated paper (which has reddish-brown colouring and is waterproof), indigo papers dip-dyed up to nine times (giving them a dense colour and purplish bloom) as well as papers brushed with clay; she also worked with materials such as vellum. She had been intrigued by the potential of the Claude Glass (an 18th -century drawing aid) which she had seen in the British Galleries, so she commissioned a replica which she used to study and draw from selected objects in the collection, in particular a harlequinade - a small folding book telling the story of Cinderella. For Bowen this object was analogous to a folding tea house she had seen and been captivated by on a visit to Japan in spring 2006.

This drawing is one of three acquired by the Museum following the artist's residency. They show the central themes of Bowen's residency and represent the range of materials and techniques that she used. Designed to be seen unframed, suspended and lit from behind, these drawings are exquisitely beautiful; they embody the achievements and insights of the residency, melding art and craft.
Bibliographic reference
Owens, Susan, The Art of Drawing British Masters and Methods since 1600, V&A Publishing, London, 2013, p. 191, fig. 153
Collection
Accession number
E.23-2009

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Record createdFebruary 18, 2009
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