Fluid Dynamic / In conversation with Louise Copping

LC You use terms such as ‘liquid geometry’, ‘captured light’ and ‘brilliant incandescence’ to describe your practice. Can you expand on these phrases?

CE I guess they’re a kind of linguistic shorthand, to sum up the core of what I’m going for at the moment. Digital drawing systems allow you to create dense sculptural forms that haven’t previously been possible. Geometries can be far more complex than they could even ten years ago. Zaha Hadid’s practice, for instance, is a textbook example of how technology is changing the way we can explore form. Studying glass making, I became aware that Dale Chihuly, for example, creates a colour and kinetic interaction with light in his work, that I’m definitely keen to evoke. So trying to capture some of that effervescence and brilliance, by exploring light and colour densities, and embedding that drama in the work, is a key part of the process.

Chuck Elliott in conversation with Louise Copping. An interview originally published by Art of England magazine.

Read More

Crack magazine / In conversation with Jake Applebee and Tom Frost

Chuck’s fascination with the machine as an object for generating an artistic product is not just confined to the world of physical art, as he explains:

“With the digitisation of music there are great examples, if you listen to Aphex Twin, Orbital or Underworld, of how you could push things forward. I mean look at Tomato Studios and Underworld in the early 1990s. You had people there doing the graphics and artwork, as well as the music. Through these various parts, they were putting together these totally beautiful, immersive environments. The world of fine art should be very organic, as much as I would imagine Underworld’s studio to be, with the whole artistic package working as one.”

“When Underworld plays live I’m really interested to see them push the music through the computers at the same time as the images are mixed and produced, as if they are playing them as a piece of music.”

Chuck Elliott in conversation with Jake Applebee and Tom Frost of Crack magazine, ahead of the now influential magazine's first issue.

Read More
Bristol Contemporary Open 2008 / Catalogue

Bristol Contemporary Open 2008 / Catalogue

Bristol Contemporary Open 2008 was a juried show held at Paintworks here in Bristol, featuring work by 24 mid career artists including Anna Gillespie, Barry Cawston, Beth Carter and Cathy Lewis. The catalogue features work by all 24 of the selected artists, alongside an introductory text and notes about the exhibition and jury.

Read More
Bristol Contemporary Open 2008 / Flyer

Bristol Contemporary Open 2008 / Flyer

Bristol Contemporary Open 2008 was a juried show held at Paintworks here in Bristol, featuring work by 24 mid career artists including Anna Gillespie, Barry Cawston, Beth Carter and Cathy Lewis. The catalogue features work by all 24 of the selected artists, alongside an introductory text and notes about the exhibition and jury.

Read More
The Art of Revelation / Bristol Post Review
Press, All Posts Chuck Elliott Press, All Posts Chuck Elliott

The Art of Revelation / Bristol Post Review

Susie Weldon visits the current exhibition at Paintworks, in Bristol, and finds some exciting work, in lots of genres, from 16 artists.

Chuck Elliott has fielded some strange questions in his time but no one has ever asked him whether one of his artworks could stand beer thrown at it before. Yet that was the question posed by a nightclub owner who saw his stunning giant computer generated prints at the Revelation exhibition which is currently showing at Paintworks in Bristol.

Read More