ActionSpace artist Thompson Hall began his three-month long residency at Autograph in March. One month in, Thompson reflects on the residency so far.
This residency with Autograph has provided time to decide where next to take my work. Being in the studio every day has given me freedom to think about my ideas at length and to just try things out and see where they might go. It also gives me a chance to switch off from outside and go into my own little world which helps formulate my ideas.
I have a new routine which is less structured so I have the freedom to be able to work when and how I want without time pressures and without pressures of having to create a specific body of work. I have wanted to do this for a very long time and felt it had been missing from all of the things I have done and achieved so far.
In the studio
I have set up the studio space dividing it into two parts, one a work area and the other a reflective area to sit and think. I have placed my drawings up around the walls to help inspire me as I look around the space. I find at different times, new things will stand out to influence my ideas and pieces. I am working both on easels and table surfaces, creating both canvas pieces as well as loose fabric paintings. Working on a flat surface has enabled me to have a much better overview of a piece and be neater with my brush strokes. I am really enjoying this new way of working and having the space to enable me to work like this. In my reflective space I have art books and an iPad so I can research or look for possible useful references.
When I arrive in the studio I have a cup of tea and read my newspaper headlines. I usually have a plan for the day of what I want to paint and achieve using the drawings as a point of reference. At the start of the week I create a plan for that week, which usually includes a trip to a specific exhibition or a studio visit from someone, relating to the residency.
I have already created at least six canvases and about ten loose fabric paintings. These have all been based on the drawings I created during the many lockdowns of 2020 and over the past year. They cover a variety of themes including the anxiety I felt whilst working at home and my thoughts throughout the changing events of lockdown. They also cover the impact and fallout of these lockdowns on society and the economy and how this affects how we live. In lockdown I worked on an iPad which meant I was online and became more aware of the rise of online abuse. This has become another topic of my paintings.
More recent themes are my family history and family background in relation to the theme of Empire. My grandfather was Ghanaian and my grandmother British. This has given me a lot of themes to build on. The images and symbols in my drawings often come from the internet. I like to look up different topics and find symbols as inspiration. These help me express visually what I want to say. I also like to look at newspaper headlines to help me with my own artwork titles and the wordplay I incorporate in my work.
Exhibition and Gallery Visits
I visited Life Between Islands at Tate Britain at the start of my residency. These were Caribbean British artists working in post-war Britain. Themes for their work included colonial upbringings, to their lives going to a post war Britain. It was interesting seeing and listening to the artists’ experiences of how they were treated by the state, the police and by society and how they often felt overlooked. I felt I was seeing a biography of each artist through their work. I felt I had that in common with some of the artists as that’s how I often make my work. It made me think more about how people are represented in the times that they live in and how a history of events of the time is so important. These artists wanted to play a part in the society that they lived in and tell their stories about the world that they saw around them and tell their side of the story, and I want to do that too.
Ronald Moody’s sculptures and Althea McNish’s textiles stood out to me most. Althea McNish has an exhibition at The William Morris Gallery which I visited last week. I really like how she combines her paintings with print techniques to create interesting repeated patterns. I found myself relating to this as some of my own geometric patterns feel similar to hers and I have also used printing in my work. Her colour combinations are eye-catching and make me smile.
I went to the Royal Academy to see the Francis Bacon exhibition and found it hard to find any parallels with my work. I thought it was very tricky to understand what I was seeing in front of me and it did feel like I was reading someone’s biography rather than having any relation to the work. That’s why I felt that it was more about someone who worked with too much emotion for my liking than anything else. I felt that the only thing that was good is that the brushstrokes were energetic and lively, but apart from that I can’t think of anything positive about it.
Read more about Thompson’s residency by clicking the link here.