David Royle
Inside Out
26th Feb - 27th March 2004
Tuesday to Friday 10am to 5pm
Saturday 12 to 5pm
'Inside out' is an expression we use every day - we know people
'inside out' (they hold no surprises), a piece of clothing
is 'inside out' (not meant to be seen). But David's choice
of title is both literal and open to other interpretations,
a way of situating the viewer in a painted interior that looks
out on two exteriors - one painted and virtual, one - looking
back into ourselves - that is real.
These are complex, challenging works that deliberately attract and repel, charged
with a sweeping energy yet executed with painstaking precision down to the smallest
detail. They take us in and out of the mind, through familiar and hallucinatory
interiors and exteriors, and leave us on the edge of space.
David's paintings, which emerge from thematic and structural juxtapositions,
are not easy. His dizzying and meticulous use of perspective gives an impression
of unreality. So a familiar prop - say, an armchair (an internal reference to
Matisse) - floats above a city seen through a night lens. What he calls his 'layered'
realities have an almost 3-dimensional effect. There is an extraordinary sense
of depth. David uses grids - occasionally disguised as tiles - as fluid boundaries
- that serve as yardsticks or as virtual rafts for the viewer to impose an illusory
order. The grids tilt, reflect, dissolve into flowing lines that might be water
or air currents or waves of light on a background of oceanic space.
Basic geometric shapes integral to the compositions draw in the viewer in their
guise of everyday objects - tables, plates, books, drawing pads, windows, buildings.
But they are also present as negative images, distorted as projected shadows
or as light, or unsettlingly transparent. We are constantly forced to look through
objects and structures and beyond them. The eyes of a face floating in deep shadow
reflect the sun coming in through windows situated behind the viewer.
In the Villa Maria paintings, the beautiful sun-drenched colours of the South
of France are present, but only briefly comforting. Memories and dread are implicit
in the shadows.
One of David's ongoing themes is the desolation and dislocation of inner city
interiors and landscapes. Inside, television and angle-poise lamps blaze. Outside,
nature is reduced to weeds in the rubble. His disturbing, electric palette appropriates
the lurid neon and acrylic colours of street signs and shop fronts to apocalyptic
effect. A local geographical feature such as 'Jacob's Ladder', which for 4 years
David's son crossed on his way to school, becomes a doubly charged symbol in
an urban nightmare - where all that awaits us at the top is a pixillated heaven.
David's paintings are about insecurity, that moment before or after a disaster.
Occasionally this is made explicit through references to trees that look like
nuclear explosions or a background of war-scarred landscapes. More often the
insecurity is generated by a dislocation of scale, with objects and rooms suspended
together in a precarious tension, small things appearing large and what should
feel large compressed or distorted. The ordinary becomes eerie.
The latest painting, Darkness Visible, brings together an outpouring of personal
references and glimpses of hell. Matisse's armchair, wallpaper and hexagonal
tiles are bled of colour by an unearthly light. The interior has been invaded,
and the painter cannot take refuge. The painter cannot take shortcuts either.
Although David may often use modern technology as a source for his imagery, he
meticulously re-draws and re-works everything through paint. He has a passion
for craftsmanship. Which is another reason why his paintings demand such close
attention, but always reward it.
Mike Dibb and Cheli Durán |
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Summertime
Flies at Villa Maria, 2000,
Oil on Linen , 132 x 167.6 cm

Blazing
Day at Villa Maria,
2000, oil on linen, 168 x 183 cm

A
Short Stay in the Sun II, 2002, oil on linen, 152.4 x 152.4
cm

Darkness Visible, 2004, oil on
linen, 152.4 x 122 cm

Exposure,
2002, oil on linen, 122 x 152.4 cm

Night Vision, 2003, oil on linen, 122 x 152.4 cm

Nightlights, 2003, oil on linen, 122 x 152.4 cm

After Day's End, 2003, oil
on linen, 137 x 235.5 cm

Jacob's
Ladder I, 2003, oil on linen,
183 x 137.2 cm

Jacob's Ladder II, 2003, oil
on linen, 183 x 137.2 cm
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