Exhibition 'Powerful Tides' in Historic Dockyard Chatham
Powerful Tides: 400 Years of Chatham and the Sea is not only a celebration of the artists inspired by The Dockyard and the ships that were built there, but also links The Dockyard back to the waterways and the sea to which it was once intrinsically connected.
The exhibition reflects how Chatham impacted on key artists between the 18th and 20th centuries โ names such as John Constable, J.M.W Turner, William Wyllie, Norman Wilkinson and Eric Ravilious โ inspired by the engineering wonders created at the Royal Dockyard at Chatham.
The historical works show a transition of styles from the romanticism of shipbuilding, including the actions fought by Chatham built ships in the 18th Century, to the colder industrial perspective of the mid-twentieth Century; where submarines and cranes replaced wooden warships with their towering masts.
The contemporary works included in the exhibition provide a link to the present โ how the River Medway, Thames Estuary and the North Sea โ all important route ways to the dockyard in its past, still inspire artists today. Nadav Kanderโs reflections on the River Medway and the Thames Estuary, Christiane Baumgartnerโs photogravures of the Medwayโs banks and river; Catherine Yassโ lightbox of the Thames at low tide and Nikolaj Larsenโs extended film portrait of the Thames reflect visually on the river, its banks, bridges and its constantly changing surface. Some artists such as Langlands and Bellโs new work explore the play on words of names of Chatham built ships and the worldโs waterways, others such Yinka Shonibare MBE (RA) with his Nelsonโs Ship in Bottle refer both to British colonialism and its expansion in trade and Empire, made possible through the freedom of the seas and new trade routes, which contrasts with J.M.W Turners The โVictoryโ Coming up the Channel with the Body of Nelsonโ.
Richard Wilsonโs Ships Opera with its references to sail, steam and diesel and Layla Curtisโ maps of the journey of messages in bottles refers to time and tide, while Tracey Eminโs neon enigmatically glows in the space. Maps and historic models of lightships contrast with Chris Orrโs contemporary engraving and Steffi Klenzโ installation of images of the glowing refracted glass from lighthouse lamps. Anselm Kieferโs photographs of the sea over laid with drawings of mathematical formulae extends our view of the flow of the river and the sea to the realms of measurement.
The Historic Dockyard Chatham is a commanding site of history. The exhibition, Powerful Tides: 400 Years of Chatham and the Sea both celebrates The Dockyard, the siteโs history and also makes us think of the tidal waterways and seas that the ships and submarines moved over and under.
