'Vestige 1', Acrylics, Paper Collage, Ink, Spray Enamel, French Polish & Misc. Solvents On Panel, 60 cm X 60 cm, 2016 |
Well, we’re a couple of weeks in, and
I’ve just completed the first painting of the 2016. That's pleasing, given my intention to
ramp up my creativity activity again after a relatively sedate second half of
2015. Truth to tell, this painting was
started just before Christmas, but the majority of the serious work took place
over the last couple of weeks, in a few relatively intensive bursts.
Anyway, ‘Vestige 1’ is intended to be the first in an ongoing series of pieces
all sharing the same basic, rather spare motif, and overall compositional
format. The idea is to repeatedly
explore what might be described as a rectangular ‘zone of absence’, within a square field of varied but
indeterminate visual texture. If that
all sounds both a bit grand and frustratingly abstract, I should perhaps
explain that the original source lies in some of the recent photos I’ve
collected of the ghostly clean patches, revealed undercoats, rectangles of tape residue and the like, which remain when posters or signage have been removed
from public walls. Squiggles of adhesive
mastic and fragments of actual poster material also feature fairly regularly in
some of this source material, and may well creep into subsequent
paintings in the proposed series.
'Vestige 1', (Detail) |
I’ve featured a variety of
photographs of this kind of thing here, in recent weeks, as my camera
has been drawn increasingly to subjects that suggest a sense of absence,
removal, or loss of some artifact or channel of communication, in the urban environment. In an attempt to boil down my current
concerns into handy buzz-phrases, two that keep bobbing to the surface are: ‘Traces of that which no longer remains’;
and ‘Lost voices’.
'Untitled', Acrylics, Paper Collage & Spray Enamel On Paper, 30 cm X 30 cm, 2015 |
An overriding
description of the spirit in which I propose to approach this particular series
of paintings might be: ‘The same, - but
different’ [1.]. Of course, there’s
nothing new about the idea of painting a series of relatively uniform
variations on a theme, and it’s really just an even more distilled step on from
at least some of last year’s ‘Map’ paintings. Anyway, as a consciously
adopted M.O., I’m going to regard it as being unashamedly in the tradition of
Monet, Reinhardt, Newman, Ryman, Richter, and a host of others far more
illustrious than I.
In terms of specifics, the
essentials of this particular motif can be seen to derive from a couple of my
recent paper-based studies. Unlike
others in that small body of work, - from the back end of last year, (and
which were more generalised in nature), those two were triggered by a
specific photograph of a section of grubby Birmingham masonry.
Central Birmingham, October 2015 |
As already mentioned,
my lens has been full of this kind of thing of late, but it feels like this
particular motif is the one that kept returning to my mind as the idea evolved. It always interests me how such intuiting of resonance operates both forwards and backwards in time. I’ve certainly noticed how a current and
specific ‘favourite’ can not only call to mind a store of related imagery, (sometimes
set aside in the archives for years), but also lead to the active seeking out
and collection of even more, during subsequent expeditions, (as is already
occurring).
'Untitled', Acrylics, Paper Collage, Ink, Adhesive Tape & Spray Enamel On Paper, 30 cm X 30 cm, 2015 |
It’s fair to say that the
processes by which 'Vestige 1' was produced represent far more of an evolution,
rather than the revolution I might have originally hoped for. One stated intention of late has been to
allow more painterly freedom into some of my work. In the event, whilst there is
some greater reliance on the essential properties of fluid media, and a
deliberate combining of often chemically incompatible materials, there remains a significant component of the paper collage approach I’ve been using for quite
a while now.
Visually, I also found myself
falling back on my customary device of a screen of repeated spots, (perhaps
alluding to half-tone reproduction), as a means of getting across a given area
of the picture plane. What is different
though, I think, is that both this, and the visual evidence of other collaged
elements, is now subsumed into a more generalised field of ‘all-over’ visual
texture. We’re talking fairly fine
margins, - I realise, but working on this piece definitely felt a bit different
from previous ones. Perhaps, I can push
myself a little further into new territory, as far as technique is concerned,
as the series develops.
'Vestige 1', (Detail) |
One definitely significant
development here is that the element of text, which has remained a feature of
all my work in recent years, is here relegated to little more than mere visual
texture. This is deliberate, not least
as another possible allusion to the 'lost
voices' or obsolete meanings suggested by the rectangular absence. It
remains important to me that those textual allusions should remain, in however
fleeting or fragmentary a form. Indeed,
I’m happy to set this as a definite parameter in which to keep working, - but am
equally happy that this might now include texts that ‘no longer remain’, as well as those that still do.
'Vestige 1', (Detail) |
Oh, and this piece definitely reflects my current
preference for a (nearly) monochrome palette.
It’ll be interesting to see how long that holds, and whether the occasional
colour accent opens the gate for more a more heightened chroma to
eventually return.
[1.]: It occurs to me, this isn't so different from John Peel's famous description of The Fall, although in their case, it related more to an overriding aesthetic spirit, rather than a propensity to work in series. Coincidentally, the specific 'ghost patch' photographed in Birmingham lay very close to a daubed graffito reading, "Hit The North", - one of that band's song titles.
[1.]: It occurs to me, this isn't so different from John Peel's famous description of The Fall, although in their case, it related more to an overriding aesthetic spirit, rather than a propensity to work in series. Coincidentally, the specific 'ghost patch' photographed in Birmingham lay very close to a daubed graffito reading, "Hit The North", - one of that band's song titles.
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