view additional image 1
View in a Room ArtworkView in a Room Background
153 Views
0

VIEW IN MY ROOM

Interior of car park - Limited Edition 3 of 10 Photograph

Nicholas Cobb

United Kingdom

Photography, Color on Paper

Size: 19.3 W x 12.8 H x 0.1 D in

Ships in a Box

info-circle
This artwork is not for sale.
Primary imagePrimary imagePrimary imagePrimary imagePrimary image Trustpilot Score
153 Views
0

About The Artwork

After an unexplained apocalyptic event Peckham and presumably London beyond is in ruins. A hundred years has passed and survivors have returned to the city to live and scavenge. A cheery scene of blossoming cherry trees in spring is depicted. …........... Last September I found myself gazing at the sunset over the London skyline. I was on the roof of Peckham’s multi-storey car park. There’s a multiplex cinema at the front, and the top three floors are home to a summer pop-up bar and sculpture show. The thought struck me that my next project should be a ruin – a post-apocalyptic diorama – and why not choose the very building I’m standing on? After-all Peckhamplex below is showing Hollywood blockbusters of apocalyptic events it this very moment and the council have plans to demolish the site. Surrounded by young people, feeling my age, I thought this would be a suitable 'vanitas' subject – enjoy it now but be aware that everything passes - and ruins have for several centuries fascinated the western mind - our being drawn to that which we most fear.

Details & Dimensions

Photography:Color on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:1

Size:19.3 W x 12.8 H x 0.1 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Nicholas Cobb is an artist who exhibits regularly and has been the subject of a number of articles about his working method where he constructs elaborate dioramas which are then photographed from various viewpoints. A number of his Car Park series photographs were exhibited in the Whitechapel Gallery and most recently, at the inaugural Peckham Festivals show in the Copeland Gallery, his 7 metre After Oil diorama caused much interest as in the past the size of the dioramas has meant they were never kept or exhibited. A dystopian anxiety runs through these models and series of photographs. Taking the psycho-spatial critique of the built environment found in J.G. Ballard's late novels as a starting point, Cobb implies a narrative or storyboard by arranging 1:87 scale figures in crowded or intimate scenes which grow ever more disturbing. Essays on his work have appeared in ICON, Photofile and fLIP magazines. His Car Park series [2010] features in the recently published Microworlds [2011] – an international survey of artists using the miniature scale. Cultural critic Mark Dery wrote about his Office Park work, 'Like the yuppie apartment-tower dwellers in David Cronenberg’s Shivers, driven to acts of bacchanalian depravity by a sexually transmitted parasite, or the residents in J.G. Ballard’s High-Rise, whose class war escalates into a Conradian nightmare of atavism, the workers in Nicholas Cobb’s Office Park seem to be possessed by a collective dementia.' Cobb also is interested in working directly in landscape. In particular he has been intrigued by the 19th century French 'plein air' landscape painters reaction to the Western landscape tradition. Using an extraordinary mirror that distorts colour and space he has photographed in Fontainebleau [where the Barbizon school worked], Giverny [where Monet created his waterlily pond and outside Aix-en-Provence [where Cezanne painted].

Thousands Of Five-Star Reviews

We deliver world-class customer service to all of our art buyers.

globe

Global Selection

Explore an unparalleled artwork selection by artists from around the world.

Satisfaction Guaranteed

Our 14-day satisfaction guarantee allows you to buy with confidence.

Support An Artist With Every Purchase

We pay our artists more on every sale than other galleries.

Need More Help?

Enjoy Complimentary Art Advisory Contact Customer Support