Empire David Wightman
Empire David Wightman
Long & Ryle
EMPIRE is David Wightman’s first solo exhibition with Long & Ryle and is the culmination of over two years of collaging, painting, and imagining. His fictional landscapes pay homage to earlier landscape painters from different periods and continents. The colour-explorations of the impressionists and post-impressionists have had their influence, as too has the compositional economy of Japanese wood-block art. Although the tradition of landscape is the obvious reference for Wightman, geometric abstraction and the colour theory of Josef Albers have also played their part in the development of his work. As a graduate of the Royal College of Art, Wightman is keenly aware of the pedigree of those artists that went before him. However, regardless of influences, his paintings are wholly unique and personal. The surfaces of Wightman’s intensely-coloured acrylic paintings are made from meticulously handcut collaged wallpaper using a technique similar to marquetry. Each piece is painstakingly collaged, crafted, and painted over a period of several weeks. Wightman’s innovative use of wallpaper to create detailed and textured surfaces - simultaneously a reference to mountainous terrain and domestic modernity - is inspired by his wallpaper-clad
childhood home in the North of England. Along with texture, colour has also become an obsession of Wightman’s practice. Magenta and orange-hued skies fluoresce above cool cyan and ultramarine lakes. Grey is used to temper and heighten colour combinations while deep indigo and Prussian blue firmaments contrast with lemon-yellow and coralpink pools. A tinted-cobalt waterfall pours from purple-hued rocks and snow-capped mountains are painted with a variety of sweet pastel tints. It is difficult to imagine another artists’ palette as more opulently colourful. His landscape paintings are beautiful distractions. The intricate collaged wallpaper and unusual colour choices are compelling: they function as abstract compositions as well as imaginary vistas. His paintings offer a glimpse of another world - seemingly real yet entirely fictional. Cherie Federico, editor of Aesthetica Magazine, has said: “You must spend time with Wightman’s paintings; on the surface they are beautiful and intricate and, like the layers they are made from, there is so much depth to his work”. Sarah Long, October 2016
Left: Cartoon for Ottoline
Ottoline iii acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 80 x 120 cm
Olympia acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 80 x 100 cm
Coraline vi acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 70 x 105 cm
Ophelia acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 75 x 100 cm
Ondine acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 80 x 100 cm
Empire iii acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 120 x 200 cm
Andromache ii acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 100 x 150 cm
Persephone, in progress acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 90 x 120 cm
Persephone acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 90 x 120 cm
Celestine iv acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 70 x 105 cm
Emmaline iv acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 90 x 150 cm
Livonia vii acrylic and collaged wallpaper on canvas 70 x 100 cm
Published by Long & Ryle 4 John Islip Street, London SW1P 4PX +44 (0) 20 7834 1434 gallery@long-and-ryle.com longandryle.com Printed by Witherbys Lithoflow Photography by Susie Brady ©David Wightman Design by Rad Husak
Long & Ryle