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Dead
Of Night, Gasworks Gallery, London 2003
Colin Gleadell, The Daily Telegraph, April 21 2003
I don't know what the going rate for a ventriloquist's dummy is, but
John Beagles and Graham Ramsay, two young art teachers in Scotland,
are asking £10,000 for a pair that they have made for their first
London exhibition. Cast in plastic resin and hand painted with wigs,
eyebrows and lashes, the dummies are self-portraits - doppelgangers
down to the prescription glasses - and come with satin lined presentation
boxes.
Since they began working together as students 1996, Beagles and Ramsay
have portrayed themselves in a variety of situations which play on the
borderline between the comic and the macabre. Their exhibition is called
Dead Of Night and is inspired by Michael Redgrave's performance in the
1945 film of the same title. It is, says Ramsay, a look at "the
darker side of entertainment". For the exhibition, the artists
are transforming the Gasworks Gallery into a Victorian music hall. In
the main room, gilt framed photographs hang like publicity posters for
the production. Footlit on stage are the two dummies. Although the dummies
lips do not move, their mocking, whining voices are heard, relayed from
the soundtrack of a video playing in an adjacent room. The video was
filmed in an abandoned 19th century music hall in Glasgow where Stan
Laurel and Cary Grant made their theatrical debuts. Once home also to
a freak show and menagarie, it's ghosts haunt the artists and their
dummies.
Since Beagles and Ramsay are independent artists, without a dealer,
prices for their work pretty much relates to cost. Construction of the
dummies was made after extensive research in America. The gilt framed
photographs are priced between £700 and £1000, and the video
at £250. But Beagles and Ramsay are on their way up. After this
show, they will take part in the first exhibition of contemporary Scottish
art to be held at the prestigious Venice Biennale. Here they will use
their own blood to make a black pudding. "Not something,"
says Ramsay, "to be served at the opening party."
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