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Jon Pilkington – Paintings should be sisters not twins…like eyebrows
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NEOCHROME is pleased to present Paintings should be sisters not twins...like eyebrows, the first Italian solo show by Jon Pilkington.
Organically Synthetic
Ritual Spontaneity
Drawn Painting
Washed Grit
Densely Loose
Coherently Fragmented
Jon Pilkington’s work lives in a world of dichotomous unity. His studio is very much an emulation of this thread; the floor splattered with so much paint it would take days to restore, while the walls are starkly white. A pile of paint tubes lies discarded on the ground but just above, on the clean table, palettes are lined out with each color carefully set and ready to be of use.
Pilkington’s gestural and vigorous canvases find themselves toiling to stay self-contained, often jumping off to the next panel. It is this play, this bounce, this control that imbues his work with vibrancy. An underpinning of geometry is challenged by organic forms but then struggles its way back to the surface to lay claim to the structure. The palette is soft and bodily with outbursts of exuberance as if to remind the viewer, I’m still here.
There is physicality to Pilkington’s practice that feels a bit like a rugby player meets ballroom dancer; at times barreling through but always with finesse, gliding and twirling. As the viewer’s eye darts quadrant-to-quadrant and painting-to-painting, one can see him performing, jumping around the studio dripping paint, adding to his mucked floor, and delicately placing a zigzag over an innocuous anthropomorphic form.
Motifs move canvas to canvas, carrying on his own inner disputes, sometimes the paint wins, sometimes, Pilkington. This self-referential process exposes both the vulnerability and sheer confidence in his gestures, which is mimicked in the space of unresolved areas alongside those that are robustly worked. Just as one expects to be let into a final form and resolution, he steps back and denies; confounding the viewer just as he has been. Pilkington pulls out his tool kit on each canvas, actively engaging with the notions of appropriation and subjectivity in historical painting, while simultaneously flipping the past on its head.
Standing in a room of Pilkington’s paintings, a key emerges of past failures; each under a new siege by his brush. One can see this immediately, like an historical record, as light washes overarch dark solid blocks and organic interjections push back on formal compositions. There’s a feeling of hunger in this state and a consistency found in a continuous place of challenge and change. Pilkington will not stop. Like a disagreement that won’t ever quite be resolved, his work feeds off this nagging state of consciousness, battling back against its own narrative.
After all, why the hell should he make peace? Finding balance in the chaos is unattainably attractive.
- Patton Hindle
Jon Pilkington (b. 1990) lives and works in London, UK.
Selected exhibitions: 247365 (New York), COMA (Sydney), V1 Gallery (Copenhagen), Rod Barton (London), Peter Von Kant (London).
Patton Hindle is a Founder/Director of yours mine & ours, New York and the Director of Gallery and Institutional Partnerships at Artspace. Previously she was the Director at DODGEgallery, New York. She is a regular contributor to Artspace Magazine and has curated exhibitions in New York and Boston. Hindle is a graduate of Boston College
Organically Synthetic
Ritual Spontaneity
Drawn Painting
Washed Grit
Densely Loose
Coherently Fragmented
Jon Pilkington’s work lives in a world of dichotomous unity. His studio is very much an emulation of this thread; the floor splattered with so much paint it would take days to restore, while the walls are starkly white. A pile of paint tubes lies discarded on the ground but just above, on the clean table, palettes are lined out with each color carefully set and ready to be of use.
Pilkington’s gestural and vigorous canvases find themselves toiling to stay self-contained, often jumping off to the next panel. It is this play, this bounce, this control that imbues his work with vibrancy. An underpinning of geometry is challenged by organic forms but then struggles its way back to the surface to lay claim to the structure. The palette is soft and bodily with outbursts of exuberance as if to remind the viewer, I’m still here.
There is physicality to Pilkington’s practice that feels a bit like a rugby player meets ballroom dancer; at times barreling through but always with finesse, gliding and twirling. As the viewer’s eye darts quadrant-to-quadrant and painting-to-painting, one can see him performing, jumping around the studio dripping paint, adding to his mucked floor, and delicately placing a zigzag over an innocuous anthropomorphic form.
Motifs move canvas to canvas, carrying on his own inner disputes, sometimes the paint wins, sometimes, Pilkington. This self-referential process exposes both the vulnerability and sheer confidence in his gestures, which is mimicked in the space of unresolved areas alongside those that are robustly worked. Just as one expects to be let into a final form and resolution, he steps back and denies; confounding the viewer just as he has been. Pilkington pulls out his tool kit on each canvas, actively engaging with the notions of appropriation and subjectivity in historical painting, while simultaneously flipping the past on its head.
Standing in a room of Pilkington’s paintings, a key emerges of past failures; each under a new siege by his brush. One can see this immediately, like an historical record, as light washes overarch dark solid blocks and organic interjections push back on formal compositions. There’s a feeling of hunger in this state and a consistency found in a continuous place of challenge and change. Pilkington will not stop. Like a disagreement that won’t ever quite be resolved, his work feeds off this nagging state of consciousness, battling back against its own narrative.
After all, why the hell should he make peace? Finding balance in the chaos is unattainably attractive.
- Patton Hindle
Jon Pilkington (b. 1990) lives and works in London, UK.
Selected exhibitions: 247365 (New York), COMA (Sydney), V1 Gallery (Copenhagen), Rod Barton (London), Peter Von Kant (London).
Patton Hindle is a Founder/Director of yours mine & ours, New York and the Director of Gallery and Institutional Partnerships at Artspace. Previously she was the Director at DODGEgallery, New York. She is a regular contributor to Artspace Magazine and has curated exhibitions in New York and Boston. Hindle is a graduate of Boston College
29
settembre 2016
Jon Pilkington – Paintings should be sisters not twins…like eyebrows
Dal 29 settembre al 06 novembre 2016
arte contemporanea
Location
NEOCHROME GALLERY
Torino, Via Stampatori, 4, (Torino)
Torino, Via Stampatori, 4, (Torino)
Vernissage
29 Settembre 2016, ore 18
Autore