David Watkins: Simultaneous Participation, Firstsite
This was the final exhibition that I worked on whilst at Firstsite/ Essex Network of Artists’ Studios, the first solo presentation of work by David Watkins.
The following text is taken from the overview that I wrote to accompany the exhibition:
Based at TAP studios in Southend, David has recently tended towards collaborative working with his peers. The nature of his work, with its focus on networks and connectivity, has reinforced this in the past but with this all-new series of paintings and drawings, David is reflecting on new languages and forms.
Mapping the internet gives it a form, even though it is simply a mass network of billions of interconnected computers. It’s this amorphous and intangible ‘space’ that David attempts to record within his work, drawing parallels between these new internet systems and 20th century scientific developments such as string theory, characterised by common features such as clustering and weak or strong links.
This translates into a visual language that is diagrammatic at first. The use of background grids enables David to begin with a structure that he can then begin to dismantle; an old language approach to a new language phenomenon. These paintings and drawings seek to take formal qualities of abstraction – line, shape and colour – and give them a shake, scattering and stretching connections and references which give the resulting works a sense of tension and movement.
They could also be read as a metaphor for an individual’s autonomy within a system, and our attempts to make sense of the structures within which we do/ don’t choose to operate. David undertakes a process of erasure in building up his picture surface. After continued reworking these paintings and drawings gain enough character to stand up for themselves on the gallery wall. Within the gallery’s swooping walls and cavernous ceilings, these works have space to breathe and to reflect their surroundings.
Despite the profound subject matter, these works are also playful. The viewer is invited, in ‘reading’ the pictures, to inhabit that actions that are involved in their making – dripping, pouring, squishing, stretching. The geometric shapes that cascade across the paintings and drawings interrupt the network and connections, almost like pinball machines which refract the lines elsewhere to form new connections.
David will produce a publication to support this exhibition. This is a new development for David’s practice, which reflects on scale and touch and traditional, but not outmoded, means of sharing information. An essay by independent curator Warren Harper will seek to provide further context for David’s work.