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INDEBT


[A selection of these prints were exhibited alongside paintings in my exhibition, No Relief, Oct 2018]

Debt exists in society as a very strong motivating force, but it also hides in plain sight. In this way, we can say that debt exists in society as a corollary of religion. The churches and creeds of religions embody their existence among us, but the real achievement can be witnessed in the extension of worship beyond the church into - potentially - every facet of a person’s life.

Similarly, debt has its own spaces of veneration and documentation. Banks and annual reports are the public face of finance - the substructure of debt. The resonance between these social forces is not happenstance. Debt can mirror religion because it relies on the same principle of personal responsibility.

The paintings and prints on view at the gallery use the traditional forms of heraldry and symbolism to present scenes from a reality entirely subjugated to debt.










Configuring Escutcheon (2014-6)


The paintings below are the first series of paintings as research into the heraldic forms of escutcheon. Eschutcheon are (formal) containers for symbolism and heritage statements, and these paintings aim to exploit the flexiblity in this form. The paintings focus on the parallax of form and function. There is an interior and an exterior, both of which oscillate between form and function as the paintings are viewed. When the treatment of thier ‘interior’ appears formal, the exterior appears functional, and vice-versa.



These paintings intentionally employ a very free association with the standard heraldic form of escutcheon, in order to ascertain how far these standardized forms can be abstracted before they dissipate.


These paintings aim to exploit the interstice between character-based representation and flat abstraction. The paintings take on bodily forms that are neither specific nor interntional, but rather a by-prouct of the heraldic form, which itself is invested with an embodiment. 



The history of escutcheon displays a wide variety in the types of forms, their usage and innovation. They are used both alone or highly adorned; they can support mythical creates as naturally as abstract color fields that represent a person, family, city or country. With this series of paintings, I am  producing motifs, approaches and scale of the subsequent painting series Invented Glyphs and Repurposing Glyphs.

All paintings acrylic, ink and graphite on paper, 22"x33"
 





Invented Glyphs 2016- 2017








Repurposing Glyphs (2016 - ongoing)




These paintings use the visual languages of heraldry and symbolism as a kind of frame, within which I am employing glyphs taken from Greek and re-purposed within economics & finance math. I am quite captivated by escutcheon and other framing devices found in heraldic forms, mainly for their immediacy, endurance and availability to interpretation. Escutcheon were made to create identity, to protect wealth, and in this way, heraldic forms became synonymous with the protection of the valuation of honor, which
became inextricable from wealth. My aim is not to re-present heraldic and honorific images but to adopt the structure of this long-established visual language to access a critique of the
hyper-specialization of finance and economics. Statistics and finance math is a language that is largely inaccessible yet forms the basis for the financial models used to pressurize, cajole, and persuade decisions that propel capital, and create norms.
The moment of specialism, a token of modernism, has produced an environment where understanding is itself a form of property, precisely because the complexity grafted onto the glyph has become what we can think of as the contemporary arcane. This very process has been mirrored in art, and there is a critique available here too but it is important to remember that this process of encoding meaning is actually originally taken from art. Some of the very
first paintings were adorned with symbols that had great devotional meaning. Through such combinations of symbols more complex meanings were pronounced, and the complexities referred to earlier, finally found a form.
These paintings have been made with mostly found (repurposed) wood; most of them are approximately 36" sq- 48"sq.; and are made with acrylic paint, ink and various acrylic media.











Inheritance 2007-9



This series of images are made with a very low resolution phone camera. The lack of 'quality' in these images is exploited to great effect. Some of the images appear abstract, others appear to connote traditions within landscape painting, such as JWM Turner, Caspar David Friedrich, Corot, Monet among others. Pixelation is the most common feature of these works, and becomes the central motif. Pixelated images run against the grain of the contemporary desire for greater resolution. However, resolution in art is not new. Resolution can also mean level of clarity, and a mediated result. In both cases, these definitions can be reified within the space of art, where art attempts to find new subjectivities.





   



SURFACES: Vectors for meditation






Fields (2010)






Real Property (2020-1)










INDEBT (recapitulated)




We Are Market Makers (2020-21)


These artworks are a lamination of symbolic forms that mimic the aesthetic norms of an heraldic symbolic arrangement. Historically, shields and flags bore escutcheon that were often designed to represent massive wealth accumulation and used by a hired (mercenary) army to protect it. Any family that had a legitimate claim to order a crest chose symbols and colors specific to them (by their region or landmarks, by animals or weapons, etc). Once designed, the escutcheon and details are used consistently across applications, much as logos are today. Materials used in their fabrication changed to align with any particular use. Ceremonial events employed family symbols within highly ornate objects that refer to other uses of the same visual lexicon. A prince’s helmet or armor, for example, would be made of a precious metal to be used in the context of the royal court and therefore rendered useless for battle, but it efficiently connotes the violence with which the wealth used to make that very amour has been gained. It is both a celebration and a warning. Soldiers marched and fought under family banners that helped them identify each other and their enemy in battle. The visual heraldic forms of escutcheon, banners, and symbols amalgamate to produce a universally legible signifier that is available to a range of uses.



The original drawings for the prints are shown below. 

These artworks are a lamination of symbolic forms that mimic the aesthetic norms of an heraldic symbolic arrangement. Historically, shields and flags bore escutcheon that were often designed to represent massive wealth accumulation and used by a hired (mercenary) army to protect it. Any family that had a legitimate claim to order a crest chose symbols and colors specific to them (by their region or landmarks, by animals or weapons, etc). Once designed, the escutcheon and details are used consistently across applications, much as logos are today. Materials used in their fabrication changed to align with any particular use. Ceremonial events employed family symbols within highly ornate objects that refer to other uses of the same visual lexicon. A prince’s helmet or armor, for example, would be made of a precious metal to be used in the context of the royal court and therefore rendered useless for battle, but it efficiently connotes the violence with which the wealth used to make that very amour has been gained. It is both a celebration and a warning. Soldiers marched and fought under family banners that helped them identify each other and their enemy in battle. The visual heraldic forms of escutcheon, banners, and symbols amalgamate to produce a universally legible signifier that is available to a range of uses. The symbology used on these artworks represents a range of correlating forms and meanings. Each item on the visual field of the escutcheon is called a charge. The charges in my work include heraldic forms (banners, shields, motto, animals and figures), cowboy imagery (hats, guns, cowboys, horses), bank logos and latterly, portraits of contemporary individuals tied to the creation and propagation of debt. I am using the escutcheon in the historical mode, as a ‘frame’ populated by several registers, or charges of symbolic imagery such as Greek glyphs, heroic cowboy imagery, bank logos, bank mottos, contextual text (the names of the work themselves). Each layer of symbolism brings another dimension of particularized meaning. Greek glyphs are applied using their repurposed definitions found in finance mathematics. The terminology of the re-purposed glyphs includes language that both defines the activity of its use in finance and somewhat reflects terms or ideas used in art theory. To give an example, Δ (delta) = the symmetric difference; θ (theta) = the unknown parameter. The particular (finance math) definition is embedded where Δ or θ are placed on the visual field, and naturally connect to adjacent charges. It is important to stress, however that the combinations one may find in the images are not meant to narrate, but rather create zones of intensity that motivate the attraction of the viewers’ gaze, through which an individual reading is attained. I use bank logos as contemporary signifiers in historical parallel with heraldic forms and cowboy imagery. The hats, guns, cowboys, horses connote a part of American history that has metamorphosized to a largely mythical cultural phenomena that persists to this day. In many ways, the violence in the representation of this era of America history is the root of its celebration in popular cultural forms. When exposed to those popular cultural forms, one may also witness zones of intensity similar to that aim to provoke the possibility of remembering. The cowboy images present a strong identification with the notion of an unregulated terrain – a free zone, a zone above and beyond the law. This proposes an overlap where lawlessness or perhaps an heroic flouting of law reflects the activity of finance within the environment of deregulation. ‘White collar crime’ for example can be directly pinned to the self-elected autonomy and antisocial status of the cowboy (strongly expressed in John Ford’s representations such as John Wayne’s Ethan character in The Searchers). A major point of difference is that in the cowboy myth, the bad actors are always held to account by the conquering sheriff or bounty hunter. The extent of control that debt and finance have over literally every aspect of society cannot be overstated. Debt is ubiquitous. When examining any product (including intangible experiences), it is easy to trace the points where debt has enabled the creation of products; it is the transactional vehicles of capital. In this way, finance continually extracts wealth through an array of constantly morphing forms of debt collection through the usage of its function. It is so pervasive that debt forms an associated penury, and in these artworks, I am directly addressing the lineage and contemporary effects of debt and finance, the creation of obscene wealth and concentrated power gained historically through violence that is celebrated through popular media and exists today in more insidious forms that no longer need to enact physical violence Debt and finance can instead enforce a new type of violence through the seductive faces of mass consumption. The early usage of heraldic messaging and what it has meant has moved on so successfully from direct violence that we have necessarily become complicit in our own demise in order to meet our basic needs.







Hand Drawn prints (2011-12)


These prints were originally drawn as part of a project called Subwaybooks (2005-9). Images shown here has been recycled by creating monotone versions of the originals and then copying those monotones by hand onto screens, effectively re-drawing my own work. I was interested in developing as many ways to work with my image bank and promote the reuse of my work across media. This is one of the first projects that I used this structure for, at least in such an obvious way,





Dumbtime (2021)











Transcribing Interference (2007)


This video simultaneously employs two processes - one of recording and one of interference. Interference within this work is presented through the use of a standardized, audible refrain (a red herring) that is overlaid with several layers of distraction. Several people follow the cell-phone video camera around this room, and effect the subject in their moment of documentation. The task given is purposefully banal, in order to redirect the focus of the viewer towards those elements not seen, but effective. This is one of the forst works I made that centered around the notion of framing, a conceptual paradigm that I have been working with in a variety of ways since.


The expectancies of viewing naturally create a politics, and as is the case with any defined system, it becomes open to intervention. The result of this intervention is work that subjugates the visual to the perceptual (non-visual) in a plodding, revealing manner. While the visual in this case is admittedly subdued in terms of it's place within the work, includes a recurring surface reflection that aims to encapsulate the notion of privilege: what does it take to have such a large, polished wooden surface and a chandelier?

 





IfButMaybe (2010)



In this video, the editing process became the focus of the work, much in the way that some of the books I have made have adopted an editing process that supersedes the aesthetic dimensions of the work. This is meant to leave the viewer in some confusion about the work, and risks rejection from the viewer. The work does reveal itself, but one must watch the whole work to understand how the editing process has been used to create a pattern. This process itself is somewhat akin to tessellation, and therefore allows the work to be endlessly looped.










Deadpan (2009-11)



This video is an attempt to span the gap between performance and its documentation. In this short piece I am driving, in the rain. I am playing a recorded speech on my iPod over the car radio. Through the duration of the piece, the art historian's strident, authorative specializism is allowed to play out, setting up the scene. An audience member is the foil for this lecturer’s confident mastery of the subject. Its punctured by a question from the audience referring to 'deadpan'. She stumbles, mumbles and reveals the limits of specialized educaiton. It creates a ring-fenced polity in which extraneous matter - often the point of interest in art - problematizes the flow of such structured, bracketed theory.

Click here to see an example of how I treat this work in the exhibition context.





Within this moment we find enclosed doubt, and through doubt the veil of certainty is lifted. Throughout the piece, I attempt to rewind the iPod to play exactly this moment as much as I can, but while distracted driving, my ability to do so is impaired. My attention oscilllates between the danger of driving and the difficulty of operating a device. Such process creates a conflation between the image as viewed and the audio that accompanies it. The image poetically represents that moment of internal questioning and connects to my overriding interest in the viewer, particularly where the voice says "well, ...I think that deadpan...leaves a lot of work up the audience..."













An Object Lesson (2017)




An Object Lesson in:

Avarice • Bigotry • Cowardice • Duplicity • Exaggeration • Fascism • Greed • Hyperbole • Ignorance • Jealousy • Kleptocracy • Louchness • Madness • Nonchalance • Patriarchy • Qua • Recklessness • Selfishness • Tautology • Unconstitutionality • Vanity • Wantonness • Xenophobia • Yacking • Zero Ø



2017 (printed 2017)194 pages
If you are interested in buying this book, CLICK HERE




The Arena of Lost Faults (2009-2017)



In this arena, laws are mutable. Laws are changed to satisfy desire. Desire exists strongly when the result is personal gain. Therefore, corporations are desirous. Where corporations have similar rights to people, laws can become useful tools rather than ethical guides or moral obligations; laws can be used as protection from accountability. When there is no accountability, there is no responsibility. When there is no responsibility, abuse occurs. When the abuses are ‘white collar crimes’ they are reified as mistakes. Mistakes made by corporations exonerate people working within them because they are protected by laws. After a protracted, farcical inquiry, these mistakes are excused with ineffective fines, ultimately producing positive public relations: a corporation that evades the restrictions of legislation is effectively untouchable, above the law. Any admission of guilt is rejected, leaving responsibility suspended. Responsibility can be avoided because there is no accountability.
This is the Arena of Lost Faults.

This project began in 2007. The images have been used in differing context, including exhibition. The original book was made in 2012. I was unsatisfied with it, and remade it, with additional material 2017 (printed 2017)
50 pages




If you are interested in buying this book, CLICK HERE




AV AT AR (2008)



Can we say that defacement exists in order that we may make progress through our (re)construction of a cultural history?
Images in this book are placed together to force a revision or at least a meditation on the floating significance of signs and symbols. Signification floats and metamorphoses through the pages of this book. In one example, it will be held within the gesture of rejection (a monument pushed over), while in another it is found within a recontextualizing of certain words (such as 'West"). This book engages with the structural relationship between art and the social/political environment through the images that are selected and arranged. Set against the cold reality of a political circumstance, demanding action and results are carefully taken photographs that, through the employment of various tropes of art-making (composition, balance, etc) will always tend to obfuscate or dilute the urgency of any political situation.



2007-2008 (printed 2008) 194 pages





Bricolage 2006-2008


194 pages
this book is not a photo essay.
this book is not a scrapbook.
this book is not a journal.
this book is not a text.
this book is not to be read.
this book is not unintelligible.
this book is not caught between.
this book is not unassertive.
this book is not unintentionally diffuse.
this book is not simple.
this book is bricolage.

(Printed 2008)





Stock (2022)


Video documentation is HERE>>


NO RELIEF (2018)

Debt exists in society as a very strong motivating force, but it also hides in plain sight. In this way, we can say that debt exists in society as a corollary of religion. The churches and creeds of religions embody their existence among us, but the real achievement can be witnessed in the extension of worship beyond the church into - potentially - every facet of a person’s life.

Similarly, debt has its own spaces of veneration and documentation. Banks and annual reports are the public face of finance - the substructure of debt. The resonance between these social forces is not happenstance. Debt can mirror religion because it relies on the same principle of personal responsibility.



Exhibition Installation shots





Stock 2022


Documentation videos 

One:


Two:







Real Property (2021)







   




Impressions (Portrayal) (2013-ongoing)


The images below are all made in camera, without any further image manipulation. I think of these as drawings.
The process itself sets up restrictions, much in the way that the processes of drawing can. Choosing any specific material (or tool) to draw with delimits the potential the work can have in terms of its dynamic range, which in turn defines the territory of the work. Of course, some of this territory is pre-ordained through (art)history; drawing with pencil will not have the same resonance as drawing with engine oil. In this case, I am drawing using a process – that of collusion.
The camera allows a manual HDR photograph to be taken – up to three photographs can be taken in one frame. I am working within the function to create entirely different imagery. There is a high degree of specificity in terms of subjects chosen, but the camera decides upon the readability of any one of those subjects within the algorithm. These images are the result of a camera struggling to place pixels within an algorithm targeted at delivering a high dynamic range for the user, and simply failing. It is the lack of attention to cropping and image depth that I am most drawn to here, and which appear to me as imbrications.






Framing the OtherFraming the Other(2015-16)


The digital montages made for under the working title Framing the Other are portraits, made by digitally painting one source into another. This process replicates the conceptual center of the work. The sources are on the one hand paintings, taken from the canon of European royalty tradition (1450-1750) and on the other, selections from the Indian Gallery by George Caitlin. The resulting portraits intentionally conflate historical chronology in an effort to externalize the exploitative ideology that results in the creation of the Indian Gallery. The American West is the furthest one can travel from the historical seat of power – Western Europe, and as such contained its own sense of otherness – those native to the west were therefore treated as otherworldly.

 
The European Royals, whose will toward colonialism ultimately framed the other in the image of Native Americans, arrogantly assumed rights to land well beyond the propriety of their inherited positions. Of course, it is the force of capital that created such a drive towards acquisition (of land), and was justified wholly by the rigid adherence to the functionaries of religious conversion: missionaries were the ruse through which Royal figures enacted colonialism. We have seen religion used throughout history to justify violence and capitalistic pursuit. These works are planned to include the use of empty baroque or rococo frames, ill fitting and therefore redolent of the status of the multivariate notion of the frame.






The Arena of Lost Faults (2010-11)


In this arena, laws are mutable. Laws are changed to satisfy desire. Desire exists strongly when the result is personal gain. Therefore, corporations are desirous. Where corporations have similar rights to people, laws can become useful tools rather than ethical guides or moral obligations; laws can be used as protection from accountability. When there is no accountability, there is no responsibility. When there is no responsibility, abuse occurs. When the abuses are ‘white collar crimes’ they are reified as mistakes. Mistakes made by corporations exonerate people working within them because they are protected by laws.




After a protracted, farcical inquiry, these mistakes are excused with ineffective fines, ultimately producing positive public relations: a corporation that evades the restrictions of legislation is effectively untouchable, above the law. Any admission of guilt is rejected, leaving responsibility suspended. Responsibility can be avoided because there is no accountability.
This is the Arena of Lost Faults.






Impressions (body language)(2012-4)


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