David Spiller - Tryin’ to Get to Heaven Before They Close the Door
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Your support makes all the difference.Where were you when you first heard 'Wild Thing'? What was your first record, LP or cassette? Which song did you fall in love to? Filled with music the paintings of David Spiller evoke a collective memory of a lifetime of song.
Beaux Arts presents an exhibition of artist David Spiller's new work. A product of London's 1960s' art school scene, Spiller's colourful re-invention of the American Pop aesthetic is grounded in an instinctual use of colour and a keen eye and ear for the lyrical phrases and comic book ephemera of popular culture.
Soulful, honest, emotive and bold, David Spiller's paintings demonstrate a powerful sense of the connection between art, music, text, colour and memory. His canvases use fragments of lyrics to appeal to each viewer's personal history and spell out a new poetry of Pop. Never sentimental but full of sentiment, his work is both uplifting and profoundly engaging through its quotation of love songs and plain avowal of fun. Sometimes a single work will contain lyrics from disparate groups and musicians such as U2, Jerry Lee Lewis, The Beatles and Bob Dylan. Occasionally he simply quotes a song his mother sang.
Spiller's studio is always filled with music and the floor is scattered with life-size canvases and stencils. Many of his works are created by laboriously stitching together panels of material. These swatches of colour and text juxtapose to create a pristine whole over which he then graffitis like a child trying to leave his mark. In an age of Hirst and Koon's assembly line art, Spiller is a welcome old school presence. His skilled draughtsmanship and painstaking processes speak of craft, technical skill and artistic integrity. Every scrawl and drip of paint reminds the viewer that behind each mark is the sweep of a hand or arc of a brush.
Above all Spiller wishes to communicate. By using the collective cultural symbolism of cartoons and the shared heritage of 20th Century music he hopes to reach out to each individual viewer through the universal visual language at his disposal. His spontaneous scribbles and graffiti hint at the frustrations of artistic communication and the struggle to create an image which is honest. 'I think it is desperation a lot of the time in my work – 'What the hell do you do?' You work like a child with a tower of bricks, building this thing, and there comes a point when you want to push it over.'
'Taking iconic images from popular culture as their starting point, Spiller's paintings knock these symbols of high kitsch from their art-historical plinths and dredge them through the gutter of urban decay and human longing.' - Jonathan Jones, Modern Painters
Tryin' to Get to Heaven Before They Close the Door, an exhibition of new work by David Spiller is at Beaux Arts London from 9th Sept - 3rd Oct, www.beauxartslondon.co.uk.
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