Hew Locke

Hew Locke is a British contemporary artist born in Brixton, London, and was born in 1959.  Locke graduated from Falmouth University in 1988 with his B.A. in Fine Arts, and then in 1994 he received his M.A. in sculpture from The Royal College of Arts.  Locke is best known for his sculptures and visual art.  Locke drew attention to himself in 2000 when he won a Paul Hamlyn award and the EASTinternational award.  Locke uses an extensive amounts of materials, which includes, but is not limited to: painting, drawing, relief, fabric, sculpture, casting, collage, and found objects.  In the beginning of Locke’s art career he derived from and was inspired by colonial and post colonial history.  This early inspiration, being that the topic was so broad, stemmed off into much more symbolism, motifs, and ideas than Locke originally had anticipated.  Even though all different ideas have stemmed from the colonial and post colonial period his main focus was power.  Early works of his included portraits of queens and monarchial figures, and other upper class figures important to the government; in order to give it contemporary and commercial relevance.  Recently another focal point of Locke’s art work is ships and what they symbolize.  He claims that ships represent trade, culture, and warfare.  Locke says that if he had not pursued his career in art, his obvious alternative career would have been a historian.

“Hew Locke.” Hales Gallery. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 Jan. 2016. <http://www.halesgallery.com/artists/15-Hew-Locke/overview/&gt;.
“Hew Locke Home Page.” Hew Locke Home Page. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 Jan. 2016. <http://www.hewlocke.net/Homepage2ndsite.html&gt;.

 

The Wine Dark Sea : BB, detail, 2016. Mixed media with hand embroidery, full size 76 x 33 x 98cmwinedarkseaBBdetail1

Janet Echelman

Janet Echelman is an artist that deals with large, massive scale and lets the wind and environment change and effect her work. She combines old technique and new technology to create her stunning artwork.

Her TED talk has been translated into 34 different languages and 1 million views. She is popular in many different counties and has been recognized for her architectural artwork several times.

She’s moved several times in her life, born in america, lived in hong kong and then Bali,Indonesia until a fire took her house. She experimented with materials from painting to bronze until one day she was watching fisherman working with their nets and wondered if that could be a new way to do sculpture without all the heavy materials.

Today Echelman has constructed net sculpture environments in metropolitan cities around the world. She sees public art as a team sport and collaborates with a range of professionals including aeronautical and mechanical engineers, architects, lighting designers, landscape architects, and fabricators.

Phil Ashcroft

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Cave Paintings, installation view, 2015. Photo: Tom Horak http://www.philashcroft.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/DSC_1442-HDR-2s_700.jpg

Phil Ashcroft is a London based painter and graphic design artist. Ashcroft completed his illustration degrees at Harrow College of Art & Design and continued to post-grad work at St. Martins College of Art & Design in London. Much of his work draws influences from abstract expressionism, landscapes, and street art.

Ashcroft’s most recent exhibition Cave Paintings was held in 2015 at the Lewisham Arthouse in London. This work uses both color and grey scale in the abstract landscapes. The paintings have a unique divisions of the picture plane through lines that create geometric shapes, which suggests push and pull in the space. The dividing lines combined with the expressive paint marks relates to drawing in space because of the depth they create and the illusion of space. The painting below, Nexus 7, part of the Cave Paintings body of work, uses lines, edges, grey scale, and expressive paint strokes to create a landscape of abstract expressive paint strokes.

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Cave Painting (Nexus 7), acrylic on canvas, 121 x 91cm, 2015. Photo: Tom Horak http://www.philashcroft.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/DSC_1427-HDRs_700crop.jpg

 

The view below of the installation shows Ashcroft’s attention to space and placement between the artworks in the exhibition itself that also relates to our theme outside the picture planes.ashcroft 2

Cave Paintings, installation view, 2015. Photo: Tom Horak http://www.philashcroft.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/DSC_1397s_700.jpg

 

Below are more works by Ashcroft for Cave Paintings.

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Cave Painting (Nexus 9), acrylic on canvas, 121 x 91cm, 2015. Photo: Tom Horak http://www.philashcroft.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/9_700px.jpg

 

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Cave Painting (Small Sunset Variation 4), acrylic on canvas, 41 x 31cm, 2015. Photo: Joe Plommer http://www.philashcroft.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/DSC1531_700px.jpg

 

 

Citation: www.philashcroft.com/site/