http://www.beaglesramsay.co.uk
download cv here
Two key interweaving currents of interest drive our work. Firstly the reoccurring use of a kind of fictionalised self-portraiture and secondly, in broad terms, a humourous examination of aspects of contemporary consumer culture. Since 1996 we’ve explored these themes in a series of sculptures, installations, video, performance and drawings, which have been exhibited nationally and internationally.
Our presence within the work has always been a performed presence; using doppelgangers has been a means of speaking in alternate voices or drawing upon multiple personae. Producing and inhabiting these shifting personae, has allowed us the conceptual space to explore aspects of contemporary culture – such as consumerism, political disenfranchisement, and the cult of celebrity - without the restrictions of a singular, authoritative voice. In the ‘Glitter Desert Island’ series (Tramway, Glasgow 2005, and MOT International, London 2007) we assumed the pose and gaze of the rarefied dandy, reclining on a gold glitter desert island complete with fake palm trees, while ‘We Are The People – Suck On This’ (ICA, London 2000) featured a restaged, downbeat version of Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver. Our 2003 solo show, ‘Dead of Night’ at Gasworks Gallery, London featured an ambitious theatrical installation containing a pair of hand crafted ventriloquist dummy doppelgangers.
Our practice is also informed by research into earlier, pre-modernist traditions within art, specifically the counter tradition of the carnivalesque. The artists within this tradition were adept at synthesising their visual aesthetic with political allegories and satirical content. The influence of this tradition is perhaps most clearly seen in our ongoing series of drawings ‘Unrealised Dreams’ which were first shown in the Scottish Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2003. This ever-expanding collection of proposals, plans and absurd schemes are presented as authentic Leonardo style sketchbook drawings.
One of the original ‘Unrealised Dreams’ proposals was developed into ‘Sanguis Gratia Artis’, a key work that represented a step away from figurative self-representation. Commissioned by the Henry Moore Foundation and Grizedale Arts for ‘Romantic Detachment’ at PS1, New York ‘Sanguis Gratia Artis’ featured a black pudding self-portrait using our own blood as the key ingredient. One of our more recent solo exhibitions, ‘Good Teeth’ (Glasgow Sculpture Studios, 2009), further developed this move away from explicit self-portraiture, featuring instead a surrogate presence in the gallery; an 8 x 5 metre glittering gold, priapic robot.
- Beagles and Ramsay 2009
http://www.artfutures.org.uk/Artist/beagles-and-ramsey
Beagles and Ramsay Good Teeth 2008
Beagles and Ramsay Glitter Desert Island 2006
Beagles and Ramsay Glitter Desert 2 2007
Beagles and Ramsay Glitter Desert 1 2007
Beagles and Ramsay Sanguis Gratia Artis – Black Pudding Self-Portrait 2004
Beagles and Ramsay Ventriloquist Dummy Self-Portrait 2003
Beagles and Ramsay Unrealised Dreams 2003
Beagles and Ramsay Unrealised Dreams – Coiffures 2003
Beagles and Ramsay Trilogy 2000
Beagles and Ramsay We Are The People 1999
Beagles and Ramsay Good Teeth 2008 MDF and gold glitter robot, 400 x 500 x 300cm, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay Glitter Desert Island 2006 archival digital photograph mounted on aluminium , 185 x 100cm, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay Glitter Desert 2 2007 archival digital print mounted on aluminium , 60 x 50cm, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay Glitter Desert 1 2007 archival digital print mounted on aluminium , 100 x 135cm, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay Sanguis Gratia Artis – Black Pudding Self-Portrait 2004 C-type print , 100 x 150cm, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay Ventriloquist Dummy Self-Portrait 2003 two figures, resin, paint, wigs and clothing, each figure 100cm tall, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay Unrealised Dreams 2003 ink and wash on aged paper , 13 x 20cm, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay Unrealised Dreams – Coiffures 2003 ink and wash on aged paper , 20 x 29cm, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay Trilogy 2000 video (3 mins) and c-type photograph, 70 x 50cm, ©the artists
Beagles and Ramsay We Are The People 1999 video (4 mins) and c-type photograph , 70 x 50cm, ©the artists