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Painting, Household on Canvas
Size: 8.3 W x 12.2 H x 2 D in
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Originally a test of newly reclaimed paints (you will see these colours appearing in numerous other later paintings) I have become very fond of this piece, its diminutive size, and layerings of colour and energetic texture. The format references the graffiti layered streets of neighbouring Lewisham, and includes several examples of experiments to reintroduce text into my work; in this instance through stylized calligraphic letters inspired by my early life in in Arabia. The canvas it is painted on was formerly a painting discarded by another artist. It is one of the earliest pieces where I adapted my methodology, and challenged myself to be more sustainable in my use of materials. In this instance only ones that had been reclaimed and recycled were used. Not being able to use whatever colour I wanted, but to have a palette limited largely by chance brought about a whole new way of thinking about colour and texture. The change was brought about by a spree of fly tipping in the streets and green spaces around my studio during the 2020 lockdown. Households had thorough clearouts, and a dearth of unscrupulous builders and decorators dumped their site waste because the regular disposal facilities were no longer as easily accessible. ‘Little abstract’ as it has come to be known, marks an important turning point in my art making practice. 10% of sale proceeds will be donated to Client Earth, a charity that uses national and international law to hold governments and corporations to account when they pollute, or fail to meet their legal obligations in relation to the environment.
2020
Household on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
8.3 W x 12.2 H x 2 D in
Not Framed
Yes
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Joe Hodway is a London based fine artist who was born in Dubai to a British mercenary and a primary school teacher. He has lived and worked in the Middle East, Europe, and South East Asia, where he picked up many of the stylistic and spiritual influences seen in his painting, sculpture and photographic work. Challenging the dominant model of art making practice, where materials must be seen to be virgin and ‘premium’ in order to achieve optimal results, Hodway proves that alternative methodologies, with a gentler environmental footprint are viable without compromising outcome. His paintings frequently incorporate reclaimed, and reconstituted paints, often salvaged from illegal fly tips in the streets and parks around his studio in South East London. These eyesores of unwanted, and polluting materials, would normally be destined for landfill, but instead are transmuted through the alchemy of art into poignant and desirable pieces. A corresponding ‘tithe’ of each piece’s sale proceeds is donated to environmental charities, to help us establish more sustainable systems, and address the exploitation of our planet’s ecosystems and resources. About his inspiration he says: "The transformative interactions between time, energy, and matter are my focus. We, as well as the world we experience, are transient combinations of these three things. Everything is perpetually exchanging elements and influence. Nothing lasts forever. It is the eternal dance of death and rebirth, attraction and repulsion. I am in love with the beautiful and terrible constancy of change. The work is a method to represent, interrogate, and participate in the rules that govern it. It is my job as an artist to explore, and draw attention to change’s inherent beauty and absurdity, so we can better understand, and appreciate our purpose.” Many of his pieces are inspired by the rusting shipping containers he sees on the banks of the Thames near his studio. They have travelled the world, experienced sea, storms, and dockyard manhandling. Their once bold colours and emblems are faded, and their sides are now scarred and rusted. They are a fitting analogy for how even the most durable of entities must eventually succumb to time and circumstance. Just as Hodway’s materials have been given new purpose, all of the atoms that make up our own bodies will eventually be transformed into part of something else too. For example, billions of years ago, we were all parts of an exploding star.
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Originally a test for newly reclaimed paints (you will see these colours appearing in numerous other later paintings) I became very fond of this piece
its deminutive size
and layerings of colour and energetic texture. The canvas it is painted on was formerly a painting discarded by another artist. It is one of the earliest pieces where I challenged myself to be more sustainable in my use fo materials
by only using ones that I had reclaimed and recycled. This was brought about by a spree of fly tipping as households had thorough clearouts over lockdown
and a dearth of unscrupulous builders and decorators dumped their site waste in the parks and streets because the regular facilities were no longer oporational. .
text
calligraphy
primary colours
graffiti
urban
gestural
abstract