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"Is the beautiful and significant difficult to find because
it is out of reach, or because it is too close to us? Do we just
look in the wrong direction? Perhaps in order to see deeply one
has to see simply."
John Murphy-Woolford
John Murphy-Woolford was born in 1967 in Cambridge and spent
his childhood in Bracknell. John's teenage years were spent in
Cornwall, where the young artist, influenced by the picturesque
landscapes and the vibrant local artistic community, went to study
art at Falmouth School of Art. He went on to receive his degree
at Coventry Polytechnic, majoring in sculpture. There he held
in high esteem and received a lot of encouragement from his teacher
Dick Whall. After graduating from Coventry John settled in London,
where he now lives and paints. John has exhibited his work at
numerous venues throughout the UK, most recently in 2006-7 at
the Mall Gallery with the Royal Society of Portrait Painters, and in 2005 his self portrait
was shortlisted by the National Portrait Gallery for the BP National
Portrait Award competition.
Artist's Statement
These paintings use everyday objects - bowls, glasses, fruit -
as a starting point for looking, thinking and trying to record
the process of doing so.
My work starts with an idea: the proposition that a stronger and
more significant connection with the world is made when you spend
time looking at it. This type of looking is active rather than
passive and takes time. It is this change in pace and attention
that creates room for discoveries. So to force this change in
attention, and try to eliminate distraction, I choose things that
are familiar.
The common and everyday are no less beautiful or moving or significant
than the spectacular, it is just that they are easily overlooked.
As we live in a world with so much competing for our attention,
simplifying what we examine may help us see more clearly.
In this process of looking there is a degree of learning which
works in opposite but complimentary directions. One is the process
of trying to see innocently, or without preconceptions or prejudices.
To remove or ignore the assumptions about what we think we know.
The other is to see critically and try and make sense of what
is being viewed. One seeks to undo, while the other seeks to build.
The work is also about the activity and process of painting.
I'm interested in how a painting is put together: the form, composition,
tone, colour, how the paint is used, the brush marks and gestures
and how to use the materials to make sense of what has been seen.
In the same way that the subjects are restrictive, the way they
are painted is also restrictive. The colour palette, compositions,
tones and visual vocabulary are all as simple as possible, in
order to be as clear as possible.
The paintings are the result of trying to push the activity of
looking and thinking through the materials and in many ways are
the record of this process. The results, I hope, somehow transfigure
the objects they depict and access something beyond the subjects
themselves. And it is this alternative view - as in the way something
looks and the perspectives on it - which interests me.
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