http://www.debbielawson.com/
download cv here
'In the 19th century Edgar Allan Poe discoursed upon what he called the “Philosophy of Furniture”; today, in order to consider in depth the work of Debbie Lawson a psychology of furniture would be a necessary requirement. One imagines that something a little more fine-grained than Gaston Bachelard’s “poetics of space” might be a useful tool as well, an analytic method subtle enough to penetrate the niceties of Lawson’s eerily engaging work.
'Objects that are apparently coherent and stable merge or fall apart, slyly transforming themselves, behaving in an atrocious fashion considering the calm and expressly inanimate order with which we might normally expect them to comply. For furnishings do not, as a rule, penetrate the space of adjacent objects, their forms are fixed in place, predictable and reliable in their mutual coexistence. But in Lawson’s “eccentric spaces” (to borrow a term from Robert Harbison) the domestic framework she has constructed is destabilised, pulled apart from within itself. One might recall in relation to this the much misused but important (and here more than mildly appropriate) concept and practice of Deconstruction, which is Jacques Derrida’s name for an almost shockingly prolific process of instability and self-critique.
'The purportedly inorganic entities featured in her mock-bourgeois tableaux have, it would appear, lived a life of action out of sight of the viewer. If, in the past, some of the artist’s work involved pieces with parts that actually readjusted themselves in proximity to the individuals present before them, in her recent installations Lawson has not allowed the viewer to witness the slipping and sliding of parts; or rather, the movement of a plant constructed from a Persian carpet is implied not actual, an effect that is arguably all the stronger for its encouragement of imagination and studied reflection.'
From an essay by Peter Suchin, 2008
http://www.nettiehorn.com/01Debbie_Lawson.htm
http://www.re-title.com/artists/Debbie-Lawson.asp
http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/debbie_lawson.htm
Debbie Lawson Persian Moose 2010
Debbie Lawson Sunset Island 2008
Debbie Lawson Chairway to Heaven 2008
Debbie Lawson Untitled (Siren) 2008
Debbie Lawson Leaf Legs 2008
Debbie Lawson Crazy Mixed-up Tree 2008
Debbie Lawson Tsunami 2006
Debbie Lawson Tundra 2004
Debbie Lawson Golden Brown (detail) 2004
Debbie Lawson Wild Thing (detail) 2006
Debbie Lawson Persian Moose 2010 290 x 185 x 60cm, ©the artist courtesy: Town Hall Hotel
Debbie Lawson Sunset Island 2008 pedestal mat and steel, 60 x 60 x 60cm, ©the artist courtesy: Nettie Horn
Debbie Lawson Chairway to Heaven 2008 chairs and steel, 50 x 520 x 70cm, ©the artist courtesy: Nettie Horn
Debbie Lawson Untitled (Siren) 2008 'persian' carpet and furniture, 35 x 135 x 40cm, ©the artist courtesy: Nettie Horn
Debbie Lawson Leaf Legs 2008 'persian' carpet and furniture, 155 x 175 x 79cm, ©the artist courtesy: Nettie Horn
Debbie Lawson Crazy Mixed-up Tree 2008 wood veneers on panel, 370 x 214cm, ©the artist courtesy: Nettie Horn
Debbie Lawson Tsunami 2006 'persian' carpet and glue, variable, ©the artist courtesy: Nettie Horn
Debbie Lawson Tundra 2004 linoleum, variable, ©the artist courtesy: The Saatchi Gallery
Debbie Lawson Golden Brown (detail) 2004 wood veneers on panel, 243 x 726cm, ©the artist courtesy: The Saatchi Gallery
Debbie Lawson Wild Thing (detail) 2006 wood veneers on panel, 243 x 152cm, ©the artist courtesy: Private Collection