ABUNDANCE will run through 4 November
7/F Pedder Building, 12 Pedder Street, Central, Hong Kong
ABUNDANCE, an exhibition of new still-life and landscape paintings by Thomas Houseago. This is the artist’s second exhibition with the gallery in Hong Kong, following Psychedelic Brothers – Drawn Paintings in 2016.
Abundance Paintings is a new body of work produced en plein air, and in a new studio in Malibu, California, which reflects on cosmic and spiritual interconnectedness and the transcendental power of nature. The works’ titles and expressive imagery evoke ocean waves and the flora of Malibu at sunrise and sunset, with suns, moons, rocks, and skies rendered in vibrant color and undulating lines.
Houseago first achieved widespread recognition through his original and vigorous approach to the subject of the human body. Utilizing mediums associated with classical and modernist sculpture alongside less traditional materials like rebar and hemp, he builds monumental figures whose surfaces and structures reveal the processes of their making. In works on canvas and paper that he describes as a cross between “drawing and mapping,” Houseago also explores the emotional and spatial power of saturated color and dynamic form. ABUNDANCE sees him further extend this aspect of his practice.
The works on view in Hong Kong reveal the influence of historical and modern Eastern and Northern European artists including the painters of the Dutch Golden Age, Munch, and Van Gogh. The notion of spontaneity also remains important; Houseago often listened to recordings of live performances by John Coltrane as he worked. The paintings of thirteenth-century Buddhist monk Muqi Fachang and Chinese painter Ma Yuan (c. 1160–1225) provided further inspiration, as did the writings of Japanese poets Saigyoˉ Hoˉshi (1118–90) and Matsuo Bashoˉ (1644–94), Chinese poets Li Bai (701–62) and Wang Wei (699–759), and ancient Chinese philosopher Laozi.
In Cosmic Objects (for Abe) and Cosmic Objects for Julian Sands (to My Yorkshire Brother), Houseago represents groups of artifacts including flowers, shells, skulls, and skull-shaped vessels to again trace a connection between outwardly diverse materials and processes. Each component appears suffused with a vital energy that renders differences in scale, origin, and even function unimportant; these humble items have a resonance equivalent to that of the celestial bodies that populate the skies of The Cosmos for Abe and Ghost Moon for A.W. Where Houseago’s Vision Paintings explored a specific correspondence—between his imaging of the restorative power of nature and an iconic work in
the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium’s collection, Jacques-Louis David’s The Death of Marat (1793)—the works in ABUNDANCE present an even more expansive perspective on the synergy between culture and environment, narrative and atmosphere. Reflecting Houseago’s sense of awe at the scale and energy of the universe, they also emphasize a hard-won rediscovery of the beauty and joy in everyday life.
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