And the Son of God Goes Forth to War in Orange Victor Sloan is developing a considerable international reputation for powerful leit-motifs of cultural phenomena in his Northern Irish homeland. This exhibition stakes out new directions in the form and content of his visual narratives, while maintaining a flow of continuity with the preoccupations and critiques delineated in earlier work. The title Acts of Faith identifies thematic unity across the range of these new selected works. From Orange marches to the symbolic defence of Derry’s walls, from sham fighting to the flaunting of emblematic devices, from gospel crusading to circus acrobatics and death-defying performances, all these are theatrical public presentations which darkly engage Victor Sloan’s imagination and which he punningly encompasses as ‘acts of faith‘. The pointing-up of religiosity in this phrase is conscious and intentional, while there is a further frisson in its etymology. The term ‘act of faith’ originates as the translation of the Portuguese ‘Auto-Da-Fé’. This was a ceremony of the Spanish Inquisition, at which, following a Procession, Mass and Sermon, death sentences were read and heretics afterwards burned at the stake. As in his earlier works, Sloan responds to the mortal implications of dramatic display and ritualistic act by deracinating his originally pristine photographs through a reductive process of marking, bleaching, toning and colouring. By means of this interventionist technique, here refined to new levels of subtlety, Sloan represents the camera-captured appearance of an external world in complex and compelling photo works which question hegemonies in the passionate Northern culturescape that the artist inhabits. Characterised by a tensioned balance between figuration and abstraction, these layered and oblique photoworks are deeply satisfying aesthetically, emotionally and intellectually Their symbiosis of form and content reflects an intimate binding of time and place, and so defies a simplistic response to things which are not simple. In the way of most significant western art of our time, Victor Sloan’s work insists on the primacy of meaning while compelling reflection on the means of expression.
These
works invite mediation on the tribal nature of humanity, our
sacred histories and our expressive capacity to give meaning and
value to life. Sloan’s mysterious images are not easy or
platitudinous, and are suffused with apocalypse rather than
celebration. Yet in their ambiguity they are not without an
affirming sacramental presence, which forces a consciousness of
good and evil in a past-haunted and Christ-haunted land. These
works deal with mythic acts of faith, paradoxically incorporating
both certainty and uncertainty, and all are ritually cast in
Sloan’s chromatically sombre, gothic North. One hundred ‘Never on a Sunday’
campaigners were outside the American Circus Ltd. Big top in a bid to persuade
punters to boycott the afternoon and evening performances. Mr. Woolsey Smith,
Worshipful Master of the Independent Lodge who took part in the protest
described it as a ‘great success’… “What we did not agree with was this further
desecration of the Sabbath and the breaking of the fourth commandment. As far as
we are concerned, the desecration of the Sabbath has gone far enough. The
Sabbath is part of our heritage and by and large the majority of people do not
want circus performances on a Sunday”
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