Rose Finn-Kelcey
It Pays to Pray
2000
L 1220 cm
unique
Please contact us for pricing information
Description
Here are chocolate vending machines, the like of which are used every day by hungry commuters moving about cities all over the world. But how strange they are when placed deep in the Sussex woodland. Linking diametrically opposed concepts and placing things in unlikely context are familiar themes in Rose Finn-Kelcey's art, and It Pays to Pray represents yet another unexpected coupling. The idea of indulging our craving for comfort with chocolate but receiving instead a prayer, gives us pause for thought. Across cultures, sometimes prayers are freely given but also sold. Bounty, Starbar, Flyte, Delight, Wispa, Drifter, Timeout, Picnic, Ripple, Devour - all names of chocolate bars - are taken as titles for the prayers, thereby turning them into sustaining concepts. The non-denominational prayers in It Pays to Pray were originally written by Finn-Kelcey on a blackboard: some one hundred and fifty in total, just ten being chosen for this sculpture. They emulate the free form of speech, and as Andrea Schlieker has written, 'Akin to poems, aphorisms, invocations or song lyrics, they are made up of short, succinct sentences. Their mood ranges from happiness to neurosis, from childishness to the elegiac, like inner voices or confessions.' On payment the prayers are delivered digitally by the machine's Light Emitting Diode (LED). The twenty pence coin is then returned to the purchaser, clattering into its receptacle.
The work was enabled by Sculpture at Goodwood for the Millennium Dome's North Meadow site, and this being within the public domain, Finn-Kelcey was obliged by the Dome's administration to justify the piece to the Bishop of Lambeth's deputy. Our understanding of the parallel between the instantaneous physical - even psychological - uplifting effect of chocolate, and that sought in prayer, is given full three dimensional presence in the proposition that It Pays to Pray.












