Commission for a house in Bristol
There's often a serendipitous aspect to the work I make, that can manifest in really unexpected ways. So it was with this lovely opportunity to produce three bespoke works for a spectacular home here in Bristol.
I was invited round to view the project, maybe halfway into what was clearly a major refurbishment, involving a significant new build extension that was being grafted onto the body of a substantial Edwardian home.
The client wanted to discuss ideas for three new artworks that would be specifically tailored to fit particular rooms really well.
The minute I walked into the double height atrium at the front of the house, I knew that there would be a fabulous opportunity to create an ultra tall piece that would span both levels, creating views from both the glazed upper walkway, and the entrance hall on the ground floor.
Psyche D / EvH, commission for a house in Bristol
I drew Psyche D / EvH (event horizon) in 2017, as part of my Current at Catto show. It’s a wildly complex drawing, that freewheeled out of control as it went on.
In its initial incarnation, it was conceived as a kind of giant psychedelic Krispy Kreme doughnut, with a petal like structure containing a wholly fluid series of line drawings, that bubble and move like a 60’s oil light show, in a kind of camomile pink colour.
Looking back from this distance it was either insane or brilliantly exuberant. I’m not sure which.
Vox Linea / platinum print / EPC #17
For a little while now, I’ve been interested in the idea of creating an edition that would somehow speak about the history of photography, and its ongoing relevance to the digital, so it seemed beautifully serendipitous when I stumbled across Max Caffell and 31 Studio, who inhabit some part of the intersection between those two things.
Max, and his father Paul before him, have been creating platinum prints from their studio in Stroud for some of the most interesting names in modern and contemporary photography, including David Bailey, Don McCullin, Simon Starling, and Sebastião Salgado, amongst many others. I don’t know when I first became aware of platinum printmaking, many years ago now I think, perhaps during a formative visit to the Fox Talbot Museum in Laycock in the eighties. It’s been a medium that has always interested me, largely for the softened beauty and delicate tonal range of the finished prints, as well as the extraordinarily glamourous history of the medium.
Edition #17 dispatched today
Max Caffell completed my first Platinum print last weekend, and I've just finished editioning it, packing it, and dispatching it today. So all being well, if you’re a club member, you should receive it in the next few days.
Proofing Edition #17
Hope this finds you well. I've been enjoying myself working up the artwork for the latest Club edition, #17, attached here. The working title is Vox linea / EPC #17 / platinum edition. I've had the idea for this monochrome drawing in the back of my mind for a couple of years now, it's one of those things that I was ultra confident would work out well, when once I actually got around to sitting down and working it all out. In many ways, I'm happier with it than I had expected to be, which is good! The piece is about the space contained within the picture plane, and the way the forms bisect, interlock, and speak to each other.
Vox linea, platinum EPC, edition #17, pt 1
Hope this finds you well. Spring is definitely in the air here, tons of new growth on the climbing rose on the back of the house, and tulip tips pushing up out of the pots. The promise of colour and excitement to come in just a couple of months time. I have to say I love this time of year, the days are getting longer, and everything seems freighted with possibility. I've been talking to, and negotiating with, Max Caffell at 31 Studio, The Platinum Printroom, and he has very graciously agreed to make an edition for us. Which I think is a really exciting prospect.
Faster looser
Alongside a number of other projects, I’ve been experimenting with some faster and looser methods for working. Back in 2005 it was at the core of my practice to complete pieces fast, and in so doing hope that the drawings would contain some vestige of a kind of live performance. That idea of speed, going faster and looser, has largely been lost in recent years, as the minutiae of the edit has come to dominate the process. Through a fantastic piece of serendipity, I have stumbled across a production facility in LA, where I can get my images processed much much faster. There’s a lot to be said for it…