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Richard Burton
Uphold -
Richard Burton
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Each composition is the result of a repetitive drawing process through which Burton distills his forms into what he calls ‘a very thin reality’, referring both to the perspective of his imagery and its superficial familiarity as well as to the application of paint. The large-scale works, for instance, comprise very thin layers of paint that are delicately applied to a canvas that has been treated with primer mixed with a special type of sand that the artist washes and then sieves by hand. The contrast between the roughly textured surface and the smooth, regularity of the painted forms, in turn, creates a cognitive distance: what we see doesn’t quite match up with our tactile experience of the work.A similar effect is produced by the series of small-scale frescoes, which Burton is showing for the first time in this exhibition. In these delicate works, the pigments are absorbed by the wet plaster so that image and material become indelibly bound while the hardness of the solidified surface creates a juxtaposition with the perceived softness of the rows of upholstered seating. The banality of the imagery is also at odds with the tradition of frescoes that were traditionally used to retell biblical and mythological stories on the walls and ceilings of grand buildings. In this way, Burton complicates our understanding of the image on both a material and conceptual level.In many ways, this dissonance between subject-matter and materiality produces a sense of longing that chimes with contemporary aspirational culture. More and more it seems we seek validation not through action, but imagery. On one level, this is what Burton’s paintings capture, a state of stagnancy, but at the same time, they also invite us to look beyond the surface, to allow our minds to wander freely and to find fulfillment in our own creativity.
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Richard Burton: Uphold
Past viewing_room