Showing posts with label Inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inspiration. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Chris Ofili @ Tate Modern



I had never really considered a future in art or design throughout most of my school life and if I'm honest, I saw it as another subject I HAD to do. However, this all changed as soon as I was introduced to the works of Chris Ofili, when my teacher noticed my penchant for bright colours, psychadelic patterns, the human form and collage.

Ofili had just won the 1998 Turner Prize for his best-known pieces that featured elephant dung among the many different materials applied to the canvas.

He had been shortlisted for the inventiveness, exuberance, humour and technical richness of his painting, but it was his vibrant and dynamic use of colour that had me hooked, adding a real energy and complexity to his work, emphasised by his multilayered use of media referencing blaxploitation and gangsta rap.

Twelve years later, the Tate Britain had a three month exhibition both of these works and those created since taking up residence in Trinidad in 2005.

Having not seen the originals paintings of the elephant dung series, it was enlightening to finally see the pieces that have had such an influence on my work throughout both my education and professional career.

The political and social messages behind each piece were lost on me as a teenager, but to see pieces such as No Woman, No Cry (Ofili's portrait of the mother of murdered London teenager, Stephen Lawrence) up close was both breathtaking and emotive. To be able to see the detail behind each piece - the layers of collage, spraypaint, oil, varnish, lacquer - and the seemingly random background patterns reminded me of the hours and effort that go into creating real art.

However, the thing that shocked me most was the subconscious influence this artist has had on my work as an artist and as a designer. I have always been fond of colour, layering and collage and it dawned on me as I gazed deeply into Captain Shit and the Legend of the Black Stars, that despite not having thought about these pieces in years (probably since those days at Westcliff High), it was being introduced to Ofili that started it all.

Refreshingly, Ofili has grown as an artist and found a new voice. He appears to have entered a 'blue period' of his own as he attempts to illustrate the dark history of the Carribean in The Blue Riders and Iscariot Blues.

There is no dung and no glitter. No collage, no psychadelic patterns. Instead the images are heavy and difficult to read and rely on texture to tell their mystical story.

Whilst I may prefer the earlier pieces that earned him his fame, I admire Ofili for this. He has continued to grow as an artist and has not allowed himself to be stuck on techniques that he knows work so well. Instead he has allowed the environment in which he lives to continue to influence his work. Gone are the urban influences from his days in Kings Cross, replaced by a more spiritual caribbean influence.

I for one can't wait for the next chapter in the journey from elephant art to nature's son.

Friday, 5 February 2010

Inspiration: Jim Steranko

Twitter is genius isn't it?

If used properly you can find some pretty amazing inspiration in the most unlikely of places.

An example of this occurred last week when following TV presenter Jonathon Ross, who posted a link to the website of comic artist Jim Steranko.


Like most children (especially those that have found themselves in the creative arena as adults), I had an obsession with comic book art as a child. However, my affections were mostly focused on the art of Batman and the Incredible Hulk, and as a result am more familiar with the art of Jack Kirby, Neal Adams, Frank Miller and Brian Bolland.

If however, I had been more interested in the likes of Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D, I would have been captivated by the works of Steranko, much sooner.

With a dark and brooding, slightly dramatic abstract composition, his work does remind me of Frank Miller, but Steranko brings an infusion of surrealism, op art and graphic design to his work.


He began his career with Harvey Comics in 1965 after trying to gain employment at Marvel. After several years of creating lesser known characters such as Spyman, MagicMaster and Gladiator, he finally teamed up with Stan Lee at Marvel to create Nick Fury, after inking sketches for Jack Kirby in Strange Tales.

Drawing on the 'aesthetic of Dali' he introduced movements such as op art and psychedelia, as well as techniques such as photo montage, to comic book art.

More recently Steranko has been involved in film and TV, notably working with the History Channel to create the series Comic Superheroes Unmasked.