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Paintings (visual works) With digital objects
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Mother and Child

Digital painting of a mother and her child, displayed in an MDF lightbox.

Artist's description:

An observation or conversation will spark a body of work. In this case, it was a conversation I had with my Grandad talking about his late wife and my grandmother, June. This conversation entailed him showing me photo-albums that I had never seen, images of my mum growing up in Canada and images of June, a woman I had never met and barely knew what she looked like. I was struck by how few images there were of my mum with her mum in existence, especially in comparison to how many there are of my mum and me.

So, I began to digitally restore these rare photographs, multiplying them. I took photos on my phone of the photo albums to document the images and later reproduce them. I am interested in the varying semiotic languages of different material methods which drives extensive material processes in my practice. For example, once an image was digitally painted it would undertake different material processes including oil painting, projection, screen printing and inkjet printing onto backlit film. Marlene Dumas wrote in her poem Women and Painting: “Painting doesn’t freeze time. It circulates and recycles time like a wheel that turns”. This sums up exactly how it felt to reproduce these images across mediums. I was recycling the images into varying materials creating layers of memories that circulated them into the present. Moreover, the process of continually drawing June with varying techniques began to create a physical material connection to a pioneering woman I am related to but have never met.

Underpinning my practice is a fascination with how changing technologies have altered our relationship to memory and time. More specifically, I am intrigued with how technologies have come to visually represent generations. The technology of a time determines how things were visually documented, for example, to see June is to look through a physical photo album, to see my last family photo is now to look back on my phone’s camera roll. My practice explores how this disparity can be used to articulate the passing of time whilst simultaneously reproducing and restoring documentation of previous generations, increasing our connection to the past and understanding our present.

Beddow, Chloe

Wrecking Ball

Wrecking Ball woodcut and cardboard print

Note from the artist: This print is part of the collection Wank!, a series of six posters for various sources - such as essays, video clips, movies or performances - all dealing with the taboo subject of female masturbation. Acting like a curator of these references, I aim to highlight that any attempt to represent feminine masturbation through a feminist eye still finds its limits where a branded masculine interpretation of feminine sexuality starts.

Campistron, Dominique

David Donaldson and the 2nd Year Class, Back Studio, GSA, 42

This item was lost in the fire in The Mackintosh Building at The Glasgow School of Art on 23rd May 2014. Study of GSA art students, including Dorothy Ballantyne, Marion Fletcher, Sheila Wilson, Tom Gardner (the artist), Jimmy Spiers, Audrey Scarle, Florence Jamieson, Fay Campbell as well as tutor David Donaldson, his wife Pat and son David, plus a life model who is thought to be a music student from Falkirk who studied at The Atheneum.

Gardner, Tom

Students on Leave, GSA, 43

This item was lost in the fire in The Mackintosh Building at The Glasgow School of Art on 23rd May 2014. Those depicted include Danny Ferguson, Gordon Huntly, Lewis Allan, Eileen Allen, Joan Docherty, Molly Brown and Ishbel Macdonald.

Gardner, Tom

Lunch, Original Refectory, GSA 42/43

This item was lost in the fire in The Mackintosh Building at The Glasgow School of Art on 23rd May 2014. GSA students and staff featured in this work include (from left to right), amongst others: Harry McLean, GSA student and conservator (seated at table bottom left, resting elbow on table); Hugh Adam Crawford, GSA staff, Drawing and Painting department (standing, front-facing, slightly left of centre); Joan Eardley, GSA student and artist (centre, standing, facing left); John Miller, GSA staff, Drawing & Painting department (slightly right of centre, facing right, carrying portfolio under right arm); Margot Sandeman, GSA student and artist (slightly right of centre, facing right, arms folded, in conversation with Cordelia Oliver); Cordelia Oliver, GSA student, art critic and journalist (slightly right of centre, facing left, in conversation with Margot Sandeman); Margaret McGavin, GSA student and artist (right of centre, adjacent to Cordelia Oliver, front-facing but looking right, in conversation with another female student); David Donaldson, GSA staff, Drawing and Painting department (right of centre, left-facing, positioned between Margaret McGavin and the female student she is talking to); Benno Schotz, GSA staff, Modelling and Sculpture department and sculptor (right hand side, facing left); Timothy Powell, GSA staff, Graphic Design department (right hand side, in the foreground, front-facing, wearing a suit).

Gardner, Tom

Northern Waterway

Abstract watercolour with layered collage. One of seven works presented to GSA by the Scottish Arts Council, as a result of the Council's collection being broken up and dispersed across Scotland.

Reeves, Philip

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