I
have been obsessed with painting since childhood and painted
steadily through my teens, progressing to Art School at
St Martins and Byam Shaw. The schools of art which most
inspired me early in my career are archetypally English.
For example, from the Euston group, especially figures like
Coldstream, I learned the importance of drawing and compositional
techniques which are a strong feature of my work. I still
practice these disciplines every week by attending a life-drawing
work-shop in South London. For me drawing has the same importance
as bar-work for a ballet-dancer. Without the graft which
bar-exercise involves, the ballet cannot look effortless;
in my own work I seek to create a similar sense of weightlessness,
so that the material seems to fly across the canvas, but
with the same purpose and direction of a good dancer.
After Art School, I became increasingly interested in the
St Ives group, especially such figures as Roger Hilton,
Patrick Heron and Ben Nicholson. From Hilton, I learned
the importance of mark-making and line in painting; I was
inspired by Heron’s expressive use of colour and from
Nicholson, I learned the significance of structure in holding
a painting together. I have since consistently attempted
to negotiate between the claims of colour and structure
without privileging either. Simultaneously, I developed
an enthusiasm for American Expressionism, particularly de
Kooning and Pollock. What struck me in their work was the
role played by dynamic, gestural mark-making and the fact
that while their work bears an obvious relation to a material
world outside their art, the paintings exist within their
own logic and space as autonomous objects.
The preliminary stage in my process of composition is generally
detailed field-work and observation of particular, real
landscapes. In recent years, I have travelled to places
as diverse as the Pyrenees, Greece and Cuba in search of
the kind of wild and open sites which particularly inspire
me. In mountains, I find the deep angles and drops which
are an especially characteristic feature of my work. Generally
I begin with long walks in the area to be painted, followed
by rapid water-colour notations of the subject. I will often
fill a couple of note-books with such sketches which I then
work up later into a second, transitional stage of composition
where I am staying. However, I now never paint the completed
work in situ. I find the process of removing myself from
the source of inspiration an important preliminary period
of the work’s gestation and abstraction. On returning
to my studio in Wandsworth, I expand on the field sketches,
working up what is in effect a series of visual notes into
the final object.
I often use collage or other mixed media. I favour acrylic,
a quick-drying medium, to make the collage adhere to the
surface of the canvas. I tend to work rapidly and very physically,
with the canvases positioned on the floor, checking them
periodically by raising them onto a wall or easel. Given
the large scale on which I work (I regularly produce paintings
which are six or even eight feet by four), I find that working
on the floor is the best means to ensure a dynamic application
of the paint. At this preliminary stage, the process of
composition is more visceral and intuitive; when the canvas
is raised, I work more intellectually, to check and shape
the direction that the painting has been taking. These are
quite separate ‘moments’ which I compare to
chess; on the floor I ‘attack’ the object from
an emotional stance; when the painting is vertical, I enter
a mode of ‘defence’, editing what has gone before.
In recent years, I have had solo shows with James Colman,
The Air Gallery and Archeus Fine Art; and group shows at
the Royal College of Art, the British Art Fair and Islington
Art Fair, amongst other venues.
Currently, my work is in a process of transition as I find
myself experimenting with new compositional values. I am
seeking to eliminate some of the structural features which
have characterised my previous work. My aim is to create
new sources of tension, together with a greater sense of
fluidity, specifically in the spatial quality of my work.
I am aiming for a more existential relation to landscape,
defined more by my inner being, and am moving further away
from literal correspondences to external landscapes. I am
also experimenting with a different range of colours than
in the past, while attempting to synthesise these into a
more mobile and concentrated ensemble.