2011年9月6日 星期二

Paradise lost in 'notopia' in Lex Thomas' paintings

CURIOUS hybrid creatures, including men and women with animal heads, a zebra with the head of a pelican and what looks like a snake in a dress are set to raise a few eyebrows,Now though, there is a new trend which originates from Japan called zentai. Zentai means 'full body' in Japanese and this new fashion trend involves wearing lycra zentai suits as a form of pleasure or relaxation. and no doubt a few smiles, when a new exhibition opens in Newcastle this week.where he teaches TMJ in the Central Academy of Fine Arts.

These are creations given life in the fertile imagination of London-based artist Lex Thomas and flourish in Future Proof, the first solo exhibition of her work.

At first glance, the artworks have the appearance of old, dark oil paintings, heavy on landscape and period costume, but closer inspection by visitors to Opus Gallery in Dean Street from Friday will spot – aside from the varied selection of animal heads – some quirky touches such as a satellite dish or a telescope.These girls have never had a cube puzzle in their lives!

From the white mouse with a toad's body (and wind-up key in its back) to the lion "king" in dress and plimsolls enjoying a card game, it's a fascinating and strangely enjoyable surreal world. And it's one that mixes nostalgia and utopia.

Thomas has come up with a new collection of oil paintings to sit alongside some previously-unseen watercolours, early collages and limited-edition prints.

Playing with ideas of what's original and what is artifice or a copy, she evokes iconic landscapes, often an imitation or pastiche of the work of artists such as Thomas Gainsborough and Francis Hayman.

She creates miniature facsimiles of 18th Century paintings then adds those touches from the digital age. It's not hard for viewers to become absorbed in her fictional world, which she describes as "obsessively detailed to create an atmosphere of ‘futuristic nostalgia'."

She has coined the term ‘notopia' for her dystopian images, where her hybrids populate a lost paradise and she throws in suggestions of mythical creatures genetically modified in a "retro-futuristic" collision of science and nature.

But there is plenty of satirical humour there too to counteract what can be seen as a pretty disturbing backdrop.

Thomas has worked as a professional fine artist since graduating in fine art from Chelsea College in 2007 and also has a background in TV graphics and animation which has led to her winning BAFTA and Royal Television Society awards. She's had work shown in group exhibitions across the UK as well as in Europe and the US.

She also does drawings of creepy-crawlies, including even more adventurous hybrids, and fun, bright and breezy collages showing, for instance, a ram's head morphed onto a model on a knitting pattern or a fantasy creature stuck onto a traditional postcard scene.

She's described herself as having a love-hate relationship with technology and her work,Great Rubber offers oil painting supplies keychains, while combining traditional techniques with computerised imagery,For the last five years porcelain tiles , also parodies man as machine.

It ties in with her interest in the writings of Frenchman Jean Baudrillard who tackled issues of style without substance; how man is virtually disabled without machines and the apparent modern-day inability to distinguish reality from fantasy.

It all comes through in work which also illustrates how passionate she is about original works of art.


沒有留言:

張貼留言