Jeremy Houghton
British artist Jeremy Houghton paints incredible journeys, favouring themes of motion, light and passages of time. The subjects that characterise these scenes are illuminated by his focus on the spaces in which bodies linger, shimmer, move and often take flight. Houghton's signature flamingo portfolio started during his first residency in South Africa where his paintings were used to raise awareness of these eye catching endangered birds. A recent visit to the Kalahari Desert has inspired a new collection elevated with gold leaf as a comment on the rarity of the species.
Whilst much of Houghton's studio practice focuses on his ongoing flamingo collection, over the last 20 years he has also been artist in residence for a number of royal, military and sporting communities, from those at Windsor Castle for HM Queen Elizabeth II to 2017's Wimbledon championships, and the competitors at the 2012 London Olympic Games. These tonal works use a reduced palette to enhance the representation of nostalgia and occasion.
Houghton continually explores the potential of negative space to heighten his dynamic compositions, and often references 'ma', the concept in Japanese aesthetics that translates roughly as 'gap' or 'pause', which in traditional practice helps balance the relationship between different areas of an image. This enables his subjects to glimmer in the liminal territory between figuration and abstraction.
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