The first section of the exhibition plays with these two ideas, exhibiting replicas of high street cash machines made in copper, large glass bowls stained with the dirt and debris cleaned from the surface of 50,000 two pence coins and glass cabinets that confine items inside which relate to the act of taking communion in the Christian church.
His second section features new artworks inspired by the natural world and its ecological systems. He grew and harvested over 80 cabbages, and used these to create sculptural artworks through horticultural processes. These can be seen to change physically over the course of the exhibition, as they dry and harden, which is one of the reasons Newling became interested in their use value, they don't stay the same forever because it is a living breathing object. This is perhapse what he is trying to suggest in this piece to the right; the cabbages metaphorically represent a pair of lungs, and are presented on a lightbox on the wall, suggesting an x-ray. His message is probably trying to show the environmental issues of today; we are destroying plant life, and plant life is what breathes oxygen into the world. See, the leaves overlap and have dried out by the time I had visited this exhibition in Nottingham Contemporary, suggesting the death of oxygen as we continue to destroy trees and the environment, whether it be an increase in CO2 emissions or urban development. There is less oxygen. The lungs are shriveling up as a result. The work of Newling is inspired by and clearly deals with current issues of today such as social, environmental and economic systems of todays society, expressing through very simple sculptures and framed pieces. I think the simplicity is what strikes the audience, but for me, I personally like the idea and the message Newling is trying to show. It does make you think really hard at first to understand what this message is. Then I suppose sometime art isn't supposed to be understood or got, it is supposed to touch you, to move you. But I am not moved by the work of newling. I find his work to be too much of a scientific experement than a finished piece of work. Though the lungs on the light box have reason to be there, they have significant purpose. It does make you think and the message touches me. For the rest of his work, it failes to interest me and I just didn't take anything away from his work, but the pair of lungs.
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