Metropolitan Art Society and The Modern Institute are delighted to present "That Petrol Emotion", an ambitious presentation of the works of five Glasgow-based artists: Martin Boyce, Jim Lambie, Victoria Morton, Scott Myles and Michael Wilkinson. The exhibition will run from February 12 until April 27, 2014, and there was a private view held on Wednesday, February 12, from 6pm to 9pm.
Representing The Modern Institute's inaugural project in Lebanon, "That Petrol Emotion" utilizes all the spaces within Metropolitan Art Society. Referencing the traditional format of a Lebanese villa, with one room dedicated to each artist, this exhibition presents a key overview of The Modern Institute's program.
The Modern Institute was founded in 1998 as a production and research gallery with the aim to bring international contemporary art to Glasgow alongside promoting Glasgow based artists around the world. It currently has two exhibition spaces both on the east side of Glasgow city center, the first in a converted bathhouse on Osborne Street and the second in a former glass factory on Aird's Lane. The gallery represents a group of artists from around the world and in the past eight years it has had four Turner Prize winners and two further nominees including Martin Boyce, Jeremy Deller, Jim Lambie, Simon Starling, Cathy Wilkes and Richard Wright.
Martin Boyce (b. 1967, Glasgow, Scotland).Martin Boyce's sculptures and spatial installations are rooted in an interest in landscape. This often takes the form of a collapse between the exterior and the interior, the natural and the constructed and how a sense of place can be described on the basis of details and fragments. In 2005 Boyce began working with a historical image of four abstract, cast concrete trees by the sculptors Jan and Joel Martel. The trees were produced for a garden by Robert Mallet-Stevens for the 'Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes' in Paris in 1925. Boyce has developed the geometric components of the original trees into a pallet of shapes and forms, which have become an intrinsic element of his practice.
Boyce won the Turner Prize in 2011, and represented Scotland at the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009, He has been exhibiting internationally since 1992.
In 2014 Boyce will present work at the Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh; the 19th Sydney Biennale; and a solo exhibition at Eva Presenhuber, Zürich.
Jim Lambie (b. 1964, Glasgow, Scotland).Jim Lambie's practice evolves from a response to the psychology of space and color and is influenced by movements in art and the history of place.
Lambie sources his material directly from the modern world. Referencing popular culture and drawing his subject matter from music and iconic figures, he makes use of everyday objects and materials - both found and fabricated. He transforms these elements into new sculptural forms, re-energizing them and giving them an alternative function.
Encapsulating ideologies in art history, and arbitrated by cultural deities, Lambie allows himself to work liberally and outside the constraints of a single medium or dimension. His sculptures and installations are able to reinvent the space into a dazzling interaction of colors, shapes and forms, challenging the viewer's perceptions and creating an elaborate, otherworldly experience.
Lambie has presented work in numerous exhibitions worldwide since 1996. He represented Scotland in the 50th Venice Biennale in 2003 and was nominated for a Turner Prize in 2005.
In 2014, Lambie has solo exhibitions at Sadie Coles, London, and Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh, alongside a major commission for Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games and a presentation within the 19th Sydney Biennale.
Victoria Morton (b.1971 Glasgow, Scotland).Victoria Morton produces sensitively intricate paintings and sculptural installations. Influenced by musical composition, movement and everyday life, alongside personal and historical narratives, Morton's works explore a continuously unfolding visual, spatial and psychological experience. Within her works Morton re-evaluates the complexity of visual representation and figuration through a combination of layering, fragmentation and movement. Drawing from this instinctive vocabulary of abstraction Morton's impulse to make these works "comes from a bodily drive as well as the desire to pursue the mental exercise of creating, disrupting and reforming complex images."
Morton works between Glasgow, Scotland and Venice, Italy. She has exhibited internationally since 1997. In 2014 Morton has a solo exhibition at the Rat Hole Gallery, Tokyo; she will also present work at the Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh.
Scott Myles (b. 1975 Dundee, Scotland).Scott Myles' conceptually based practice finds material expression in sculpture, text-based works, juxtapositions of readymade objects and installations. As a whole, his work represents a complex network of responses to social and physical infrastructures. Most notably, these have taken shape as investigations into architecture and language, including the use of forms extracted from the municipal and cultural landscapes, as well as formal experiments that engage particular art historical lineages like gestural abstraction.
Myles has exhibited in numerous exhibitions worldwide since 1998. In 2014 Myles will have a solo exhibition at The Modern Institute, Glasgow, and will present work at Clark House Initiative, Bombay.
Michael Wilkinson (b. 1965, Merseyside, UK)Michael Wilkinson's practice draws from a complex negotiation of cultural references, political and art history, punk rock and anarchism.
Working mainly in monochrome, or from a palette of limited colors, Wilkinson's works incorporate a variety of materials including found photographs and materials, catalogue pages, blackboard paint, beeswax, verdigris, audio and VHS tape, vinyl records, Lego and etched mirrors.
Through the use of such disparate media Wilkinson employs a collaging or layering technique that reflects his multiple subject references - juxtaposing gestural abstraction, social history and physical elements derived from his broader practice, Wilkinson works almost always suggest an element of upheaval or unrest, either looking back into the past, or as measure of the present.
Wilkinson has been exhibiting internationally since 2001. He has an upcoming solo exhibition at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York in 2014.
Beiruting News
Other news
-
What's up ?CFI Advances Financial Education Through Academic Partnership with AUST
26 february 2026 -
What's up ?LEVAIN Reveals the Story Behind Its Interior
26 february 2026 -
What's up ?$75,000 DELIVERED: TAWFEER’S CAMPAIGN PROVIDES CRITICAL FUNDING FOR BREAST CANCER PATIENTS THROUGH THE LEBANESE BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION
10 february 2026 -
What's up ?Qlayaat Airport Set for Takeoff as Summer Approaches
08 february 2026 -
What's up ?Ibrahim Maalouf & Hiba Tawaji announce a joint musical project
03 february 2026 -
What's up ?CFI Organizes an Educational Tour at Leading Lebanese Universities to Bring Real-World Trading Education to Students
04 february 2026 -
What's up ?Minister of Industry Joe Issa-El-Khoury: Towards an Innovative and Sustainable Industrial Sector
02 february 2026 -
What's up ?"Made of Many"! More Success for Al Forno Gourmet: Opening of a Second Branch in Verdun
01 february 2026 -
What's up ?Workshop by “ASSAMEH Birth & Beyond” on Congenital Anomalies
30 january 2026 -
What's up ?This week’s OLT20 Chart Analysis
21 january 2026 -
What's up ?70th Anniversary Opening of the Baalbeck International Festival with a Cine-Concert Tribute to Gabriel Yared, co-produced with the Abu Dhabi Festival
18 january 2026 -
What's up ?World Premiere: “Ousafirou Wahdi Malikan”, A Grand Symphonic Oratorio Marking the Centennial of Mansour Rahbani Composed by Oussama Rahbani | Starring Hiba Tawaji
18 january 2026 -
What's up ?Why Beirut Still Matters: A Global Company’s Bet on Lebanese Talent
15 january 2026 -
What's up ?Rebirth Beirut Opens 2026 with an Innovative Art Experience: a catwalk for paintings “As We Exist” by Hiba El-Khatib Badreddine
14 january 2026 -
What's up ?Meet Lebanese-American Singer Mayssa Karaa
12 january 2026 -
What's up ?Monoprix Opens Its First Store in Lebanon in Partnership with Gray Mackenzie Group
23 december 2025 -
What's up ?A Night of Music, Solidarity, and Purpose Shining Stars of Hope 2025 at MusicHall Beirut
18 december 2025 -
What's up ?Tania Kassis illuminates Tripoli in a huge Christmas concert with a sublime red dress designed by Robert Abi Nader
15 december 2025 -
What's up ?Bassam Fattouh and OpenMinds Celebrate Diversity and Beauty with “The Puzzle of Beauty”
09 december 2025 -
What's up ?Tania Kassis Faces Cyberattack Ahead of Her Concerts… but the Show Goes On!
09 december 2025

