I've recently been in the process of
moving from my current 3D studio in Dalston, to a larger (and much
closer to home) one in Bethnal Green. So whilst all the materials and
equipment that I normally use for making sculptures have been boxed
up ready for the move, I've been working on some paintings in my 2D
studio.
For a while now I've been tinkering
with the idea of doing some 2D and 3D cross-over pieces. One line of
enquiry that I'm eager to pursue is a series of painted tower and box
sculptures; either brightly painted in single colours, with possible
tonal variations, or with intricate designs, like tattoos. However,
whilst sorting through my store of old wood, I rediscovered some
sections of early twentieth century packing crates that I'd been
collecting. Because of their characteristic patinas, stains, and old
labels, I like to use them in the construction of my box and tower
structures. But this time I thought that I'd use some of the plywood
to paint on. In this first one, 'Tentacle Touch Teddy', I made a
start on the cross over process by depicting an image of one of my
wheeled, orifice boxes on the surface of the very material that I
normally use to construct the sculptures themselves. There's also
something very satisfying about painting on a rough, and untreated
mid-tone surface (and working with its existing idiosyncrasies), as
opposed to a pristine white one.
For this second piece, which is more
of a quick painterly sketch, I was fascinated by the woman's almost
disproportionately long torso; a detail I then accentuated by making
it a fraction longer. Apart from the black marker lines I chose not
to add any dark shading to the piece, and instead let the actual
colour of the plywood fill in for shadow.
With this third painting, which I'm
trying to fight the urge to call 'Octopussy', I wanted to use a flat
Pop Art/cartoon style to create more of a contrast between the paint
and the plywood's natural surface. I also wanted to come up with a
contemporary take on the traditional Shunga prints of Japan. And in
keeping with the Japanese theme, I incorporated the octopus tentacle
(now a heavily eroticised image in much of the material that comes
out of Japan), but subverted its presence by having the woman use it
for her own masturbatory purposes, as opposed to the usual phallus
metaphor that has the tip end of the tentacle exploring and
attempting to penetrate.