William Waterworth's Ein Tir Instinctually Captures Beauty @ Pipeline in London

A woman balances a rudimentary aeroplane-like structure on her head in a field. Zissou, 2023, by William Waterworth.

Zissou, 2023

review by Lara Monro
all images courtesy of the artist

Tatiana Cheneviere opened Pipeline in October 2022. The contemporary art gallery has taken a refreshing approach to presenting emerging and mid-career artists. It introduces each forthcoming exhibiting artist by showcasing a single artwork in a separate, enclosed space to the main gallery area. The art work is specifically chosen by the artist to provide relevant context to their practice and upcoming exhibition. As a result of working for over a decade at one of the most established international blue chip galleries, Cheneviere wanted to create a program that encourages a slower experience to understand the evolving parameters of a single creative practice. Cheneviere explains, “Pipeline’s aim is to reinvigorate the conversation between artist and collector and celebrate the subtleties of storytelling through art.” To date, Pipeline has showcased the work of a diverse selection of artists incluidng Tommy Harrison, Johanna Bath and Emmanuel Awuni

Ein Tir, which translates to Our Land in Welsh is currently on view at Pipeline. The exhibition chronicles three new series and key works by the photographer William Waterworth. Born in Macclesfield, Waterworth studied art history at Manchester University, where the work of Sally Mann captivated and inspired him to pursue his interest in photography. “I found Mann’s photos very moving. I guess they felt especially so back then because the paintings I had been studying as part of the art history course weren’t moving me in the same way. There was something about photography; its immediacy and realness.” 

Waterworth decided to leave Manchester for Paris where he studied photography for a year and through multiple influences began to adopt a photographic style, “after I left Manchester, and as a result of Sally Mann's work, I bought a book on Jeanloup Sieff. It was his deeply tonal black & whites that inspired mine.” Waterworth was awarded the Prix Picto de la Photographie de Mode and has since established a photographic career, which includes working with Alexander McQueen and Erdem. 

A dramatic black and white portrait of a man in chain armor with a rope crown. Hamlet as Knight, 2022, William Waterworth.

Hamlet as Knight, 2022

Dramatic black and white photograph of a nude male figure kneeling in a concrete circle outdoors. Benjamin Evans, 2023, by William Waterworth.

Benjamin Evans, 2023

Central to Waterworth’s practice is a quest for stories and the places they are formed, “I like stories and adventure very much, but what I like most about photography is how it can force you to be more open to all walks of life.” In 2016, Waterworth’s fascination with hearing other people’s stories led to a pilgramige up the East Coast of England from Grimsby to Lindisfarne. 

In Ein Tir, Waterworth has taken over the entire gallery space, the first time a single artist has done so at Pipeline. We observe Waterworth's love for exploring, recreating and capturing stories as well as his love for collaboration. His three new series are shown alongside a selection of collage works and text in the end room where a work presented by the next artist is usually shown. 

Waterworth has used the end space to function in its usual way by drawing back the curtain and contextualizing the other exhibited works. These new images chronicle his pilgrimage to Julia Margaret Cameron’s home on the Isle of Wight, the story of Zissou and the flying machine, and the journey a carpenter makes to the Alps inspired by Thomas Mann’s novel The Magic Mountain (1924). “Everything stems from the book at the front of the gallery. It’s made up of 100 photographs and is inspired by Guy Bourdin’s Untouched work of photographs. Then, there are ten framed pieces varying in size, which leads you to the back room; a wall of collage involving the three specific stories I made in March. We traveled to the Isle of Wight, the Alps, and Dorset. They are narrative-driven and could not have happened without the collaboration of Joel Kerr, who created the accompanying video work and Edie Ashley who designed the costumes.” 

Waterworth's deep interest in capturing inherent beauty stems from an instinct, “one's views on beauty is so subjective, but in my case I guess I respond to instinct and let that lead me. I don't really know what it is, perhaps a sensitivity or awareness. All I know is I can feel a great subject when they walk into a room. There's an unexplainable presence to them.” His ability to capture beauty is further reflected through the curation of his diverse body of work on view in the main room where he has carefully selected images from varying corners of his practice, including The Wrestlers (2021). 

Ein Tir is on view through June 10 at
Pipeline, 35 Eastcastle Street London

Dramatic black and white photograph of a somber woman in white frills, facing the camera, as a man in black robes lifts his arms in the background. May and Tennyson, 2023, by William Waterworth.

May and Tennyson, 2023