Three new ceramic sculptures and three large textile works that weave narratives of the body as a vessel for an assortment of indulgences and vices.

Exhibition Dates: 24 November – 16 December 2016

Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery is pleased to present our first solo exhibition with Renee So (London-based Australian artist), in an exhibition titled ‘Vessel Man’.

Vessel Man’ includes three new ceramic sculptures and three large textile works that weave narratives of the body as a vessel for an assortment of indulgences and vices. So works with yarn fiber and clay, creating enigmatic characters in her tapestries and ceramics that suggest a divergence of myriad lineages.

Initially interested in the decorative arts of East and West, So’s material investigation draws from an array of art history and anthropomorphic ceramicware. Her multifaceted works evoke not just the 16th century German stoneware jugs with their trademark bearded face called Bellarmines, but also Greco-Roman sculptures, Assyrian friezes, prehistoric pottery and cartoon graphics. Exemplary in her newest sculptures are borrowed conceits such as the double mirror-image faces that echo the king on a playing card and tripod legs inspired by Chinese Neolithic cauldrons.

In ‘Vessel Man’, So’s fascination with figures and objects as transformative vessels is concentrated into the boot in her latest tapestries. This new body of work signals a progressive breakdown in the structure of the doubled headed figure, as it gradually develops into a stylized form both classical and dandy. So executes her two-dimensional works using a knitting machine, painstakingly “constructing” the image row by row, a process that warrants tremendous dexterity. She deftly injects humour into humble depiction and a restrained colour palette with the artist’s outstanding gift for visual language and exceptional craftsmanship. 

So’s works have been described as ‘totemic and universal’[1], they prompt viewers to examine how forms from mythology, ancient and modern history might be built in, or filtered through, different mediums to form rich and highly idiosyncratic visual choreographies. The durational aspect of So’s slow building up of the figure coil by coil or knitting line by line, enables the artist to distance her chosen forms from their origins, while at the same time suggesting the transitional relationship between culture and representation.  Our gallery is delighted to welcome Renee So to our stable of artists.

—Claire (Visitserngtrakul) Vis-Le


Renee So (b. 1974, Hong Kong) immigrated to Melbourne, Australia in 1975, now lives and works in London since 2005. So has held solo exhibitions in London, Switzerland, New Zealand, Sydney and Melbourne. Recent group exhibitions include ‘One Day, Something Happens: Paintings of People: A Selection by Jennifer Higgie from the Arts Council Collection’, Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds; Nottingham Castle, Nottingham; Highlanes Gallery, Drogheda; Atkinson Gallery, Southport and Towner Art Gallery, Eastbourne, UK (2015-2016); ‘A Conspiracy of Detail’, Mackintosh Museum, Glasgow, UK (2013); ‘Dawn Chorus’, Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds, UK (2012); ‘British Art Now’, Saatchi Gallery, London, UK, The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, Russia and the Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia (2009-2011); ‘Jean-Luc Blanc: Opera Rock’, Musée d’Art Contemporain de Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France (2009). In 2006, So was included in The 6th Shanghai Biennale: Hyper Design, Shanghai. 24 November – 16 December 2016


[1] Dylan Rainforth, ‘Review: Renee So’, Sunday Age, Melbourne, 20 Apr 2008: 25.

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Renee So Legs II, 2016; knitted synthetic fibre, oak tray frame; 150 x 120 x 6 cm; enquire
Legs II, 2016
knitted synthetic fibre, oak tray frame
150 x 120 x 6 cm
Renee So Going Out, 2016; Knitted linen and acrylic yarn, oak frame; 150 x 120 cm; enquire
Going Out, 2016
Knitted linen and acrylic yarn, oak frame
150 x 120 cm
Renee So Circle, 2016; knitted acrylic yarn, oak frame; 150 x 150 cm; enquire
Circle, 2016
knitted acrylic yarn, oak frame
150 x 150 cm
Renee So Bellarmine XV, 2016; stoneware; 45 x 38 x 38 cm; enquire
Bellarmine XV, 2016
stoneware
45 x 38 x 38 cm
Renee So Bellarmine XVII, 2016; stoneware; 49 x 25 x 26 cm; enquire
Bellarmine XVII, 2016
stoneware
49 x 25 x 26 cm
Renee So Bellarmine XVI, 2016; stoneware; 49 x 23 x 19 cm; enquire
Bellarmine XVI, 2016
stoneware
49 x 23 x 19 cm