In Circles
Fay Ballard
Handel Street Projects
Gallery Press Release
15 October – 17 December 2021
By appointment
Handel Street Projects is pleased to announce an exhibition of new works on paper by Fay Ballard. In these drawings Ballard takes the circle, rendering some in graphite’s subtle spectrum of greys, and others in luminous watercolour. The series comprises 40 circles in total; many radiate a sense of calm and serenity, while others are more extrovert, their playful colours reminiscent of Ballard’s 1970s childhood.
Ballard’s working process is intuitive and each circle is the result of prolonged periods of concentration. Each circle evolves as the drawing is made. Although she gives herself a set of rules: a circle radius of 14, 18 or 56cm divided into concentric bands of 5 or 10mm, the human touch is evident. Glitches of the hand are incorporated – a stray pencil line or a brush mark overlapping watercolour. No two look the same. As Gilda Williams writes in the catalogue to accompany the exhibition:
‘This is not a mechanical art-making practice, set on repeat. Each drawing gives rise to a unique space of contemplation – ‘a reverie’, as Ballard describes her state when working, echoing the term used by Wilfred Bion to describe moments of psychoanalytical break-through.’
Ballard talks about creating an ‘emotional pitch’ and the series reflects a personal journey, perhaps an internal resolution after a decade of rediscovering her mother who died in 1964. Her interest in psychoanalysis underpins these drawings, especially Hanna Segal’s ideas on art as a reparative act. For Ballard, the circles could also be shelters offering containment. Others recall memories of her 1970s childhood growing up in Shepperton:
‘Fairground rides, psychedelia, gobstoppers, Spirograph and those cardboard spinning discs found in cereal packets’.
Ballard began the circles after trips to Iran and Morocco, inspired by their art and architecture, especially the brickwork of ancient sites and the mosques in Iran. She had also visited Peter Zumthor’s Kolumba Museum in Cologne, admiring the light grey brick walls that enclose the ruins of a Gothic Church and earlier archaeological site.
To book your visit please email us or call 07815 754634
Handel Street Projects
14 Florence Street
London N1