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Painting, Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 39.4 W x 39.4 H x 0.8 D in
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Artist featured in a collection
I was approached by one of the teams behind London fashion week to produce their staging for the Opening Catwalk of the week, The Vin + Omi catwalk featuring Debbie Harry. I was approached 2 weeks and 2 days before opening and they needed 52 Canvases completed for then. The canvas arrived to me 2 days after I accepted the commission, and needed to be collected 4 days before the show. I had 10 days to produce 52 canvas of….something. I was given free reign with what to create but whatever I created I knew I had to be able to do it on mass. Which would be a mammoth task as I hand paint everything I produce. I began to think about artists who had mass produced their work (namely Warhol) and the silk screen technique. I however like to hand paint EVERYTHING. So I thought, what if instead of cloning my paintings…I painted a clone? That’s where the concept of repainting by hand over and over again dolly the sheep arrived in my head. To paint something that it itself a clone, but every single piece is an individual, hand crafted work of art. Coming up with the idea was the easy part….however making it happen was hell. I could not use my studio, as time travelling would mean less painting time, so I worked on all 52 canvas simultaneously in my flat. I would do 5 brushstrokes in one colour on one canvas, then move to the next and do the exact same 5 brushstrokes in a different technique on the next and so on. I would move from my bed in the morning then I would work round the canvases that covered every wall of my apartment. I would start in the bedroom, then move to the paintings in the spare bedroom, then the paintings in the lounge, then the paintings in the kitchen, then the paintings in the bath, then the paintings hanging on my coat rack, and so on until I came back to the start…and did another 5 brushstrokes and continued again. I tried to make it as autonomous as possible. Instead of using a machine to produce my work, I wanted to be a machine.
2018
Acrylic on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
39.4 W x 39.4 H x 0.8 D in
Not Framed
No
Ships in a Crate
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United Kingdom.
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United Kingdom
Conor Collins is a Manchester based artist who uses unconventional materials and techniques in his art in order to express meaning and messages in his work. Conor’s work has appeared in publications such as TIME Magazine and been shortlisted for the Celeste Art Prize and winning the START Art Prize which saw him exhibiting at BOZAR (Brussels). Collectors of Conor’s work include Stephen Fry, Ian McKellen and Giorgio Armani. Conor has in the past used materials such as HIV Positive Blood, Diamond Dust, Written Words and more in order to convey a strong social or political message. His work challenges the ideas of aesthetic beauty and political rhetoric. As such his work has exhibited both in Galleries and The Speakers House of the House of Commons (UK). Conor continues to challenge both himself and the boundaries of what art should/should not do. He hopes in time to create a platform where the voices of creatives are as influential for social change as the politicians making changes into law.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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