LONDON.- A new exhibition by British painter Ian Davenport (b. 1966, Sidcup, Kent) which includes the artists largest ever wall to floor installation, alongside new and recent work is now open at
Waddington Custot. Two immense paintings installed in the heart of the gallery, Lake 1 and Lake 2 feature lines of poured paint that flow down the length of the wall, and into a pool of colour that extends over eight metres across the gallery floor.
Developed over several months in Davenports studio in Peckham, south east London, these two large scale installations are a natural progression for his work. In recent years Davenport has been working on an ever more ambitious scale: in 2017 he was invited to invited to make a 14-metre long painting for the Giardini at the Venice Biennale; 2022 saw the opening of a site-specific installation on the steps of the Chiostro del Bramante in Rome, as part of an exhibition curated by Danilo Eccher. Of this new work in London, the artist says: Working on a large scale, flooding the gallery with colour, brings out certain themes in painting that interest me. I can allow the paint to behave more like a sculptural entity: it is manipulated by me but also by gravity, and the work has a pronounced relationship to the floor, much like a sculpture.
The use of unconventional methods to apply paint is central to Davenports practice: spanning a career of over three decades, his paintings have been created with syringes and watering cans, or with paint poured directly from its tin. In this exhibition, Davenports more recent paintings of poured lines reveal a greater sense of symmetry, and a technique whereby the pooled paint is pushed back on itself, creating a new optical effect which evokes a tide of colour. Whilst retaining his original sense of calculated rhythm, the overall effect is now one of mirroring. The colours are selected instinctively, indirectly inspired by sources as diverse as medieval stained glass and Saturday morning cartoons.
The exhibition at Waddington Custot marks Davenports tenth show with the gallery, beginning with a debut in 1990 after his graduation from Goldsmiths as part of the YBA generation. Davenports first exhibition at Waddington Custot, then Waddington Galleries, in 1990, was described as an extraordinary debut by critics who compared the singularity of his distinctive approach to painting with that of Barnett Newman and Jackson Pollock. A coinciding exhibition of selected works on paper is on show at the Burton Art Gallery and Museum in Bideford, Devon.
Ian Davenport (b. 1966, Sidcup, Kent) is an abstract painter recognised for his complex colour compositions and whose work is informed by a deep understanding and enjoyment of paint. His various means of execution are driven by a desire to investigate the paradox between control and chance. It has led him to emphasise the action of painting as his subject matter, observing that the how to paint became the what to paint. He is well-known for using hypodermic syringes to pour liquid acrylic paint onto surfaces. In 2008, Davenport noticed how the paint puddled on the floor and this created a visual contradiction between the controlled, precise lines that then merged to become autonomous and self-determined.
Since graduating from Goldsmiths College of Art in 1988, Davenport received early recognition participating in Freeze, a student-curated exhibition at the Surrey Docks in London Docklands in 1988, which exhibited the work of Goldsmiths students who would later come to be loosely known as the YBAs (Young British Artists). Only two years after graduation, Davenport had his first solo exhibition at Waddington Galleries in 1990, and in the same year, his work was included in The British Art Show, touring to Leeds City Art Gallery and Hayward Gallery, London. He was nominated for the Turner Prize in 1991, and in 1999, was awarded the John Moores Painting Prize. Davenport has been the subject of numerous exhibitions worldwide, with solo museum shows at Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, Tate Liverpool and Dallas Contemporary. His work is held in important museum collections throughout the world, including Tate, London; British Museum, London, National Museum Wales, Cardiff; Centre Pompidou, Paris; MoMA, New York, and Dallas Museum of Art, Texas.
Waddington Custot
Ian Davenport: Lake
October 6th, 2023 - November 11th, 2023