Chloe Leaper
Alex Virji
Jatinder Gill
Juliette Mahieux
Dimitrios Oikonomou
Faten Hakimi
Joni Hirata Duarte
Polly Bagnall
Julia Hamilton
Nancy Cogswell
Richard Hoey
Richard Crawford
Charlie Warde
David MacDiarmid
Viv Lawes
The exhibition features the work by 17 students in the Georgian surroundings of the School's historic site. The GAM MA Fine Art Prize awards one of the graduating students.
City & Guilds of London Art School proudly presents its 2012 MA Fine Art Show. 17 students will
show their work in the Georgian surroundings of the School’s historic site on the edge of Cleaver
Square, minutes away from Kennington tube station. Most of the works will be for sale and entrance
to the exhibition is free.
The GAM MA Fine Art Prize awards one of the graduating students £4,000. This year’s judging panel
includes art critic Richard Cork, gallerist Alan Cristea, artist and alumnus Alastair Mackie, and
collector and Contemporary Art Society Trustee Cathy Wills. In addition GAM is providing bursary
support and assistance for the Fine Art Department’s visiting lecturer programme.
About City & Guilds
City & Guilds of London Art School, founded in 1854, occupies a distinctive position in art education. It
is the only art school in London offering degree-validated courses at both undergraduate and
postgraduate levels which has retained its independent status. Students are especially attracted to an
art school where traditional craft skills are still valued and taught in a very supportive environment.
The School offers an intensive 1 year full time (or 2 year part-time) MA in Fine Art, giving students the
chance to benefit from advanced teaching by leading practitioners and develop their practice within a
critical and professional framework with a very good staff to student ratio and ample studio space. A
2011 survey by Modern Painters Magazine ranked it the third best graduate arts program in the UK.
In Fine Art, the School is known for the quality of its teaching in the traditions of painting, sculpture
and printmaking within a contemporary context. This specialist position provides an important
alternative to the priorities of most other, larger art schools, and lends a high degree of focus to the
students involved. Recent graduates such as Barnaby Hosking, Ruth Goddard, Alastair Mackie, Alex
Gene Morrison, Oliver Clegg and Hugo Wilson have gone on to establish themselves as leading
contemporary artists.
The School’s independent status has been crucial to its remaining small and specialist. All courses
are taught by practicing artists and career professionals with international reputations. Led by Tony
Carter and Robin Mason, the Fine Art department has tutors with highly successful careers of their
own including Reece Jones, Andrew Grassie, Gavin Nolan, Teresita Dennis, Andy Bannister, Kate
Palmer and Jane Langley. Visiting lecturers have included: Norman Rosenthal, Basil Beattie, Paul
Winstanley, Andrew Mummery, Alexis Harding, Gordon Cheung, Colin Smith, David Kefford, Anne
Hardy, Tom Godfrey, Lucy Williams, Zavier Ellis, Max Attenborough, Chris Davies, Will Turner, Paul
Becker, Francesca Lowe, Helen Sumpter, Nick Hackworth, Jonathan Wateridge, Neil Rumming, and
Christian Ward.
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The show does not disappoint: all major materials and methods are represented. From Chloe
Leaper’s wire sculptures, like nervy sketches in the air, through Alex Virji’s diminutive canvases
searching for the substance behind the void left when the representational image is no longer present,
to architect Jatinder Gill’s installation of ‘Urbaglyphics’ – found objects on city streets that spike
childhood memories of urban life – variety and contrast is everywhere.
Take figurative work: Juliette Mahieux’s use of the polished historical style of artists such as
Leonardo and Ingres to present confrontational figurative poses contrasts completely with Dimitrios
Oikonomou’s large grisailles of dehumanised beings protesting at the ugliness of economic injustice,
and Faten Hakimi’s figures screaming at the psychological repression wrought by the Lebanese Civil
War. Classically trained Joni Hirata Duarte’s half-hidden expressionistic talking heads represent his
search for the invisible life behind the representational image, while Polly Bagnall paints the human
gesture by strapping objects soaked in paint to her body and filming her performance of painting with
them. She sums up the benefits of the freedoms within the course: “The tutors, even when baffled by
my intentions, were wholeheartedly positive of me.”
Having time to think is both a luxury and a stimulus that postgraduate level study provides. For Julia
Hamilton, a return to the School ten years after having completed her undergraduate degree allowed
her to return to where she left off. Her paintings of everyday objects, imbued with feelings and ideas
about the lives of their owners, emerge and dissolve through the blackness of printers’ ink, like the
fragments of memory they recall.
Nancy Cogswell, whose mixed media images of enigmatic open drawers centre upon her primary
themes of obfuscation and emptiness, has found the “insightful and abundant” tutorial input and peer
review sessions to be the most important aspect of formal study. For self-taught artist Richard Hoey,
it has profoundly affected his output: he experienced a “rupture” five months into the course when his
tutor showed him a printed image of Jesus and the Devil that he remembered from his childhood. This
catalyzed a volte-face from his previous dark abstract paintings where process was more important
than image, to a practice where “image is everything”, exploring societal attitudes towards death
through bright kaleidoscope collages of icons of religion and popular culture.
Richard Crawford, a graduate of Hornsey College of Art in the revolutionary 1960s, says the
academic requirement of the dissertation was the means through which he was able to join the critical
and historical context of his practice to expand the meaning of his work beyond the personal. Thus his
installations of birds among the plastic flotsam of the urban environment are in a “social context in
which birds are under threat from environmental degradation”.
Interaction with past graduates, who often use the facilities, is another factor in the high level of
stimulation students experience in this intimate environment. Charlie Warde, long drawn to urban
themes, has moved from painting and printing to include film over the past year. His stop-frame
animation of a series of prints he made of Ernö Goldfinger’s Trellick Tower, each image disintegrating
sequentially to a blur, prompted collaboration with veteran architect Neave Brown, who regularly uses
the print room facilities, on a drawing of Brown’s Alexandra Road estate in Camden.
The School’s embrace of craft techniques is another important factor that promotes diversity. It is
seen clearly in David MacDiarmid’s hand-stitched, fabric-covered sculptures of geometric matrices,
where architecture meets sculpture. Aiming to create pieces that appear to have a function while
being autonomous, he has always been drawn to craft practices, particularly textiles. “The freedom on
this course is that you are actually allowed to explore craft in a fine art context”, he says.
In summary, a pedagogy that promotes freedom of choice, the interaction between fine art and craft
techniques, the social mix of young and mature, established professionals and emerging artists,
British and overseas nationals and, above all, the time to focus, has resulted here in a show where a
school style is mercifully absent, where diversity is celebrated.
Viv Lawes is a Humanities Tutor at City & Guilds and correspondent for The Art Newspaper.
This is an extract from her catalogue essay.
MA Fine Art supported by:
GAM is delighted to support City & Guilds Fine Art MA programme with a £4000 prize for a graduating
student, bursary support and assistance for the Department's visiting lecturer programme. GAM’s
association with the visual arts originated with its founder, Gilbert de Botton, a visionary financier and
well-known patron and leading collector of modern and contemporary art. His legacy at GAM is an
organisational culture that seeks to identify and nurture talent, whether that is in the world of asset
management or in the arts. Today GAM continues to support the international contemporary art
scene, to identify budding artists, and to introduce young children to the joys of visual art and
galleries.
Established in 1983, GAM is an independent, active investment manager, delivering investment
solutions to institutions, intermediaries, private clients and charities from offices in financial centres
around the world. Its aim is to deliver strong, long-term returns for clients through some of the world’s
most talented investment managers. Its focus on performance, risk management, uncompromising
investments and partnership with clients enables it to achieve that objective.
www.gam.com
Image: Charlie Warde
For all press inquiries or requests for images for the MA Show 2012
please contact Jasper Joffe jasperjoffe@hotmail.com or 079571 36066
Private View Wednesday 12 September 5pm to 9pm
City & Guilds of London Art School
124 Kennington Park Road - London SE11 4DJ
Thursday 13 September 10am – 7.30pm
Friday 14 September 10am – 7.30pm
Saturday 15 September 10am – 5pm
Sunday 16 September 10am – 5pm