Tuesday 26 March 2013

Nathan Ford's latest work

Last summer as I walked into the 2012 BP Portrait Award in the National Portrait Gallery to see Nathan Ford’s entry ‘Joachim’, a tiny 28 x 20 cm canvas, I was immediately struck by its hanging and also by the surrounding competition. It was hung rather apologetically between 2 enormous canvases, and demanded the visitor get up close and personal with it. It also deserved to be given a little time.

In terms of the 54 other competitors, listeners to Mark Kermode’s film reviews will have heard his oft repeat mantra about the ‘death of narrative cinema’. Well, the BP Award seemed to be the insipid death of figurative portraiture as row upon row of large ‘perfect’ portraits gave you everything on a plate; the subject gazing into the artist’s easel, and photorealism becoming an over-used one trick pony. Given that there were 2,187 entries, I wondered if Nathan really was the only painter in the world who saw the possibilities of the portrait format rather than its limitations, or whether it was merely the judges who couldn’t see beyond their paint brushes?

Given this I looked forward to Nathan’s bi-ennial solo exhibition at Beaux Arts in Bath


Please click on the photos for larger versions. They really do deserve to be seen in the flesh if you can make it.
 





'Butterfly Affectation’ by Nathan Ford

When I was about 14 my art teacher told me I’d never be much cop at art as it looked like technical drawing (which I was actually good at).  Unfortunately he was right.

Nathan though has a huge amount of talent in both applications, and in his recent paintings he has been leaving in his ‘calculations’ and more of his draftsman’s markings, whilst also demonstrating the painterly ability and free thinking he has in profusion.

As Nathan’s family has enlarged / began to grow up, he seems to feature them more and more. Of the paintings with recognisable people in them only 3 are not of his wife, children or parents.   In addition, several of his cityscapes seem to be inspired by the Norwood / Crystal Palace area of London where he grew up as a child.  To say that Nathan is having a mid-life crisis would certainly be over the top, but he does seem to be ruminating a lot on existence, his childhood haunts, and whether his sons will be able to grow up in this increasingly cruel world.
 ‘South Circular’ by Nathan Ford
'Plateau' by Nathan Ford

For several years now Nathan‘s urban scapes have often featured his children seemingly lost and vulnerable in busy metropolitan thoroughfares that belittle them, as though their lives are fleeting and disposable.  Of these new paintings ‘Plateau’ is the most clearly ‘perilous’ in its urgency as his young son hovers at the edge of a tube platform.  His other canvases often present a more ‘real’ danger to me though, as there is something unreal about ‘Plateau‘; as though this is only perceived danger.  The platform is empty, which even on Boxing Day is never achieved in London, and on the opposite platform just two solitary men loiter, with seemingly no inquisitiveness in the abandoned tot.  The concourse behind looks empty (and incidentally rather looks like Baker Street or Edgware Rd) and even the advertising boards only have old ripped paper on them.  This therefore has the feel of one of those abandoned tube stations, like Aldwych, and is surely more of a dream or an apocalyptic vision than a reality?  A ‘monster’ is ready to devour the iconic ‘Underground’ sign on the wall, and the peeling hoardings have innocent drawings on them; a sign that Nathan’s children are certainly well and truly safe, and have been  drawing on his paintings again!

'Boundary Wall (study)' by Nathan Ford

If you ever wondered what goes on in the minds of young boys then Nathan’s new proclivity for letting his two boys doodle on his paintings seems to suggest that if you are ever on Family Fortunes your top 4 answers should be that young boys mostly think about  deep sea troglodyte fish, monsters, big teeth, and stickmen who look a little like the spaced out children’s TV character ‘Bod’. And before anyone says ‘Dran’, Nathan had never seen his work before letting his kids loose on his own meticulous work.

'The Triangle' by Nathan Ford

The danger works best in ‘The Triangle’ as additional inferences bestow a sense of foreboding.  His boys, as usual, are walking away from the viewer (or the painter...), and there is no hint of a good Samaritan who might stop to enquire about the welfare of these two little poppets walking in the middle of a road.   The ’one way street’ signs light up to suggest they are walking into a void, and the CCTV camera is pointing the wrong way; doing nothing to put the viewers mind at rest. 

 'Incoming’ by Nathan Ford

'Pricetown’ by Nathan Ford
 

’Hurricane Terrence’ (left) and ’Samuel’ (right)  by Nathan Ford

Although the sparkling, exploding paintings like ‘Butterfly Affectation’ and ‘South Circular’ may (rightly) grab the attention, there is no amount of subtlety in the small, dim landscapes such as ‘Incoming’ and ‘Pricetown’, and there are also withering, bursting caricatures in ’Samuel’ and ’Hurricane Terrence’, all 4 of which strangely remain in the very exclusive club of ‘unsold paintings‘.   It sadly seems as though buyers don’t want the murky and secretive landscapes, or the ’wild’ looking portraits, even though I would humbly suggest the later in particular show Nathan’s inner angst and technical fluency the most lucidly.

'Flock' by Nathan Ford

‘Flock’ is a rare pastoral painting, but is also technically a portrait, as curious sheep try to gang up on the painter, their faces emerging out of the flickering twilight in various forms of readiness, as if they are made of wax melting on the austere hillside.

'Reuben 1.13’ (left) and ‘Joachim 8.12’ (right)  by Nathan Ford

They say that ‘the eyes are the window of the soul’. If that is true then Nathan’s numerous small portraits force you to gaze straight into the inner sanctum of a person’s psyche, as often only an eye is ‘finished’ and the rest is inferred, sketched or incomplete, rather like how you think you know someone but really they don’t even totally know themselves and are still incomplete and deficient.   ‘Flies’ buzz around the sitter’s heads. Rage and anger explodes in a few of them.   Quiet melancholy abounds in others, and Nathan’s sketch marks sometimes make it feel like you can see the plates that make up the crazy paving of a broken skull.

There is one double page spread in the catalogue where the paintings of Nathan’s children make you feel like you are looking in to the eyes of Anna and Nathan themselves.   ‘Reuben 1.13’ has the doe eyed gaze of his mother, and ‘Joachim 8.12’ has the slightly melancholic face of his father, plus the family penchant for males attired in a hat. It is a shame that they are not also hung together, but that is a minuscule bleat amongst this exceptional exhibition.

Nathan Ford's exhibition is on at Beaux Arts in Bath, until 6th April 2013. Entry is free. http://www.beauxartsbath.co.uk

Friday 25 January 2013

Rae – Nocturnal Trips


Signal Gallery
Paul St, London
25 Jan – 16 Feb 2013

Photos: NoLionsInEngland except Brooklynite Gallery where stated



This week I had the pleasure of showing Hraq Vartigan, co-founder and editor of Hyperallergic the state of play in Shoreditch’s art. I re-learnt an awful lot myself in the process, not least of which was how enriched our walls are by the work of distinguished foreign visitors. The latest overseas artist to add international colourful and flavour to our grimy east end state is NY's Rae, over for his first solo London show at Signal Gallery.

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Rae, NY, photo by: Brooklynite Gallery


Examination of various flickr feeds reveals a prodigious talent for quirky and ramshackle sculptural assemblages pinned to poles, walls and other street furniture. Chaotic combination of found objects are fixed together to create madcap boxy characters, in RAEs world no material combination or colour clash is off limits. Thus far his contribution to the colour of London’s scenery has been limited to paste-ups. Good friend Hookedblog surmises that to prepare his street work requires a few days scouring the streets for objects and raw materials which he hasn’t had time for since arrival to prepare for the show. Personally I can’t see why a travelling international artist can’t rely on his gallerists for a few weeks advanced dumpster diving ;-)

RAE
Rae, NY, photo by: Brooklynite Gallery


RAE wears his NY influences quite openly, one composition tips its hat to Faile’s dog, the angular arms and indeed intestinal tracts of the characters nod to Skewville and a huge flamboyant swirling waft of the cloak lays at the feet of Basquiat. Dude’s from NY, so why not. To be fair, rumour has it that Rae is a hugely significant figure on the NY street art and gallery scene beyond just his artistic involvement.

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Love Your Bus Driver


The characters are energetic, slightly naive and flat. They cavort and distort in a way that encourages long pleasurable moments disentangling what might actually be happening in the canvas. The chopped up faces with their bent noses and flattened mouths may suggest a tribal cubism with dots.

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Panic

Outline characters which bring to mind nothing more than the NY subway chalk on black paper graffiti of Keith Haring are tiled in many of Rea's prints and canvases. A cluster of them sneak into his version of The Green Lady, aptly if not jauntily titled Tertchikoff Rip Off, as if we might not notice the Haring-esque interlopers.

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Tertchikoff Rip Off


A couple feature a beaten copper border which lend the paintings some kind of iconostasis effect. Rae’s handiness with a bit of sculptural metal on canvas is echoed several other pieces such as this NY Gossip. Is that bucket-helmet echoing the get-my-tin-hat “I’m going to say this just to provoke you” chatroom staple?

NY Gossip
NY Gossip


The big picture is that Rae’s work looks beautiful. Discussing Rae’s visual DNA leads to many quality names being dropped, think Basquiat with fewer words and you have the essence of his appeal. Maybe next time, someone can chuck Rae in a gallery with the contents of a rag-and-bone man’s cart, close the doors for a week and say “install the shit out of that!”

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For Your Consideration


More pics in a Flickr photoset here

Links:
Signal Gallery

Brooklynite Gallery

Sunday 18 November 2012

Cranio - Lost In London



Zero Cool Gallery @ Red Bull Studios, London
Nov 16th – 19th 2012

All photos: NoLionsInEngland


Interesting opening in London this week of Cranio’s show “Lost in London” . Interesting because this guy’s work is beautiful, obviously, but also because the question arises “how come we see so little Brazilian street art talent in the UK?”

Cranio feat DScreet
Cranio, DScreet (detail)


After loving Cranio’s work by proxy on the net for the past 4 years it was a great thrill when his presence in London was recently revealed by the whiff of spraypaint on Brick Lane.

Cranio (Brazil)


A few nights later, more Cranio work appeared in Hackney Wick.

Sweet Toof, Cranio
Cranio, Sweet Toof


Several other shutters have been painted and most recently, we chanced upon him again decorating the outside of a Brazilian restaurant on Rivington St.

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The gallery show is a straight forward hand of some ten or so cartoon portraits, compositions featuring our hero lost among totemic London iconography and some Brazilian surrealism.

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2012

Cranio - Hitting The New Beast
Hitting The New Beast


Cranio’s figures are Brazilian rainforest Indians painted wearing their party suits – blue body paint and solid red stripes across their eyes. Solid black across the eyes means war apparently. The two streams of coherence running through this show concern Brazilians on the lash and a Brazilian writer getting up in London.

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Portrait I

The paintings are actually a record of Cranio’s despair at the fate of the rainforest Indians who sell up their land for deforestation and with the loot go and party with western hairstyles, western goods but no realisation that the deal bartered away their culture as well as their homelands.

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Consumerist Turist


Speaking of Brazilians in London, back to that question, why so few Brazilians in the UK? The Os Gemeos twins did a couple of huge commissions a few years back but I don’t recall any UK solo shows; Titifreak has been over once or twice (2009, O Contemporary), Milo Tchais is semi-permanent resident but generally we seem to see far fewer visiting Brazilian artists that our friends in USA or mainland Europe. So hats off to Cranio and lovely to see him poking fun at his experience as a Brazilian native painting in London.

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Big Bus


The rich and vibrant colours work incredibly well in Cranio’s work outdoors, the characters always pop off dark backgrounds so brighter backgrounds on a few of the canvasses in this show came as a bit of a surprise.

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Red Bull Gives You Wings


You may also notice that both on the canvas and outdoors Cranio has avoided full on Pixacao. Cranio’s view is that Pixacao is a true Brazilian culture and it lives only in Brazil. Fair enough, good on him for not exploiting it abroad.

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If This Was My Street


One more thing that beggars belief, all the way from Brazil, three or four weeks in town....show open for just four days!

Cranio Show, London


More pics here

Cranio's flicks here

Sunday 7 October 2012

Pablo Delgado: The Second Thirds



Pure Evil Gallery
108 Leonard St, London
4 - 28 Oct 2012

All photos by NoLionsInEngland




Lilliputian tableaus started appearing at ground level in London about 2 years ago, firstly there were Georgian doorways, then a diaspora of ladies plying a darker trade followed more recently by surreal man-animal-space vehicle compositions. Figures and animals were always emphasised with shadows painted on the pavement.

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Gullible's Travels - stalking Pablo Delgado lolitas

Pablo Delgado


The artist responsible was Mexican Pablo Delgado, resident in London. A brief small scale show in the Pure Evil gallery in late 2011 was followed by a major automobile work at the Banger Art show in June of this year.

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Banger Art


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Pablo Delgado, Aida at Banger Art


The Banger Art show marked Delgado as a serious worker of themes and concepts., the current show at Pure Evil gallery is going to open the eyes of anyone who thought Delgado just worked with magazine cut outs slapped on a wall. Upstairs are a couple of large framed compositions whose cut out figures are said by Deglado to represent where all his work begins, the selection of figures.

Pablo Delgado @ Pure Evil Gallery


The most fascinating pieces downstairs are a collection of 6 mirrored tableaus, the outlines of figures are raised from the surface of a card mounted on a circular frame and hung so that anyone less than say 20 feet tall could not possibly look down at the image. Viewing is by means of their reflection in a tilted mirror above the piece. The view throws the floor underneath the piece up as vertical backdrop to the scene, this makes the world look like various planes have been cracked and twisted, what is vertical we see as horizontal and what is floor we see as a desiccated crumbling cliff. As if the actual scene itself wasn’t sufficiently surreal.

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The effect of evidently drawing on paper, cutting and folding out the outline then viewing from behind is played on with several of the larger drawings on paper.  One would imagine that in any normal domestic environment there is surely a high risk of the cardboard outline getting damaged, or perhaps that just NoLions Towers.

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A collection of water filled jars provide a lens to distort the view of miniature divers, looking like a gathering of Borrowers holding a fetish party.

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Delgado relishes playing with light, we knew that from the painted shadows associated with his street pieces, and a large proportion of the work in this show delights in playing with light, optics and geometry. The painted beam of light in this piece was so convincing the viewer is inclined to seek the source of light behind the hanging picture.

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Scattered around the floor are many more of the conventional Delgado style wall compositions similar to those we have seen on the streets of London. And like on the streets, we see cosmic travel artefacts popping up frequently in his bizarre scenes

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Pablo Delgado @ Pure Evil Gallery


In a show where the bizarre is the norm and the surreal is commonplace, one of the weirdest aspects is the sight of shadows without their casting figure, a sight which is also common on the streets where the paste up has disappeared through natural causes – decay or theft. In this show Delgado surprises us with the development of his techniques but that element of cute humour present in his simpler street works has not evaporated in the translation. A very enjoyable and intriguing show well worth a visit. Like a visitor to Disneyland, that other well known land of suspended disbelief, be prepared to discover that it's a small world after all.

More photos HERE


Tuesday 2 October 2012

Olek, Injustice, Anti Slavery International, Dirty White Cotton


All photos: NoLionsInEngland




Ready mades – the term coined by Duchamp when he elevated everyday pissoirs to works of art – is annexed by Poland/NY artist Olek to describe in one way the main form of her work, "Crochet Readymades". It is worth googling the images of the effect she has when she cloaks public sculpture in crochet art. There is a lot more to her work, including performance art where she dresses up volunteers in full body crochet morph suits to interact with the public.

Gallery incident screen grab
Amusing interaction,man in Olek crochet body suit, Olek UK Solo show 2012.


Anyone who thinks slavery died out with the 19th century deeds of William Wilberforce and the Slavery Abolition Act needs to take a peek around themselves, detention and exploitation thrives all around us, even here in London where immigrant workers have their passports confiscated by gangmasters, are obliged to live in insanitary overcrowded conditions at exorbitant rent and paid such a pittance that they are never out of the debt of their gangmasters.

Olek is showing her support for the work of slavery international by hanging this massive four panel crochet piece at Village Underground, London this week. Here is a very short time lapse of the panels being installed - Click through to view it properly on Olek's Vimeo stream!


Olek In London from olek on Vimeo.

Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
BY MARTIN LUTHER KING

September 29th - October 5th, 2012
Village Underground, London, UK


The “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” quote is from a letter written by Martin Luther King from a Birmingham (Alabama) Jail in 1963.

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Olek, Village Underground,


The statement resonates with Olek’s own personal predicament, following an incident on a visit to the UK around the time of her solo show at Tony’s Gallery last year, Olek has been found guilty despite the incident arising as she defended herself against the unwanted and excessive attentions of a man in a bar. Olek is expecting sentencing this week and is currently restricted by an ASBO style tag. Again, Life and Art are inseparable


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Olek - Free At Last?


Village underground hosts an art show and auction this Wednesday (3rd Oct 12) staged by Street Art Against Slavery to benefit Anti Slavery International. Details of the auction can be found HERE. Olek is supporting this cause and her piece on Great Eastern Street is part of the event.

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Street Artists Against Slavery, Weds 3 OCt 2012, rsvp essential (link below)


While addressing this worthy issue it is worth mentioning a couple of other closely related street art interventions. Firstly, insulation tape artists AD/SO who also has donated work to the Street Artists Against Slavery auction executed this stunning 8 story piece on the multi storey car park very close to Village Underground.

AD/SO
AD/SO


We also came across this Mear One piece “Freedom For Humanity” looking stunning on Hanbury St.

Freedom To Humanity (detail) - MEAR ONE
Mear One


Finally, Dr D has been getting up some paste up to show support for a documentary exposing labour exploitation and its consequences in the cotton trade, and if there is one thing we have learned about Dr d its that he only does good cause.

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Dr d., The Cotton Film: Dirty White Gold


The Cotton Film: Dirty White Gold is being produced by Leah Borromeo (some readers may know her by the name Montris), the film needs some funding and Dr d. is releasing this Dot and Nick Cotton (venerable and slightly un-hinged stars of UK soap opera Eastenders”) print to raise funds to support the production of this film. Details of the fund raising and Dr d print are HERE, support it!


Wrapping up on a lighter note, the day after Olek installed the crochet work, someone darned (damn – I hope that is the right word) a heart into the piece overnight. A wool love tag. Wow! Piece over tag, yarn outline over Crochet Readymade, whatever the unwritten rules of crochet piecing and tagging are its lovely to see wool dogging is nice and sweet and supportive!

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Heart Olek


LINKS
Olek
Street Art Against Slavery
Anti Slavery International
The Cotton Film: Dirty White Gold