Mark
Surridge
Land Veils
1st May - 31st May 2003
Tuesday to Friday 10am to 5pm
Illustrated catalogue available
Mark Surridge is a painter who to some extent works in a very English
tradition, landscape, which is the base on which he says he is "grappling
with abstract relationships between shapes, colours and textures
on the picture plane." At first glance his work looks abstract
and the results have their own very personal syntax, punctuation
and orchestration. They become almost performances of landscape
rather than a celebratory record.
In notes he made two years ago, he refers to train journeys from
home in Cornwall to London and back, and he says how many of his
paintings have been affected by memories of views seen from the
train and his awareness of the 'frame' of the windows. Of all modes
of transport, the train can lull the passenger into a state that
might be called translucence of mind. As the train picks up speed,
the vistas become fleeting and objects close by seem to fly, just
as the paint appears to be flying in some of Surridge's pictures.
The titles of individual works in the show bear this out - Freedom
Flicker, Field Change, Physical Drift, Land Wind.
Further into his notes, he says he starts with landscape. "I
enter into it with a sketch book, I draw, take notes. I look for
contrasts, strong shapes, sometimes making written notes" His
walks in the Cornish countryside are part of his daily routine.
Surridge works to produce paintings as a series, and he says that
a residue of information and sensations keeps trying to come through
from a previous series. There is certainly continuity in his work
but, underlying all, development, exploration and risk are evident.
Surridge's paint is arresting. Broad one-stroke brush marks make
one think- of Ivon Hitchens who also caught aspects of landscape
on the wing! Random spatters of thick pigment and scratchings add
to an overall orchestration. The viewer might also sense a manifestation
of speed, rushes of air. This is not to suggest that the paintings
have been done quickly. They are hard-wrought pieces suggesting
a sensibility as sensitive as litmus paper to the moods of his
chosen terrain.
Liam Hanley 2003
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