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Painter Stephen Newton: Life in the Abstract, Abbey Walk Gallery

As human beings, we are mysterious creatures: what makes us tick 鈥撀爋ur hopes, desires, our fears and secret pains 鈥撀爄s what bonds us together. Whilst viewing the work of Stephen Newton, scenes of solitude and isolation cast the mind聽into contemplation of the human condition and eternity.聽However, Stephen Newton feels that his work is 鈥渁n expression鈥 and that it doesn’t stem from a set idea. 鈥淢y paintings never refer to a specific place that could actually be located somewhere. They don鈥檛 have any narrative or symbolism or anything to do with dreams or memories, or other agendas of any sort.鈥 His attitude towards his work is clear, as it is not just an extension of him, but something bigger.

Stephen has exhibited extensively throughout Europe, America and the UK. The latest acquisition of his work is Room with a View of Cliffs,聽now housed at the Madison Museum of Fine Art, America. He has also been described by the New York critic and philosopher Donald Kuspit as “one of the best painters painting in the world today.” In addition to聽being a national and international acclaimed artist, he is a highly commended author with a distinguished academic career.

Stephen lives between London and Grimsby, where his studio is based. He paints in Lincolnshire because of the light, buying paint by the litre, and opening the tins so the evaporative effect causes premature thickening, thus enabling his remarkably thick layers of texture. One is聽immediately struck by this assertion of surface and its materiality, which come from the artist鈥檚 exploration of the processes of painting and his subconscious.

Stephen鈥檚 paintings portray compelling elemental images 鈥撀爋dd objects and parts of buildings, walls, staircases, chairs and windows 鈥撀爄mages that are raw and uncompromising, a reminder to the viewer of how buildings can encapsulate our hopes and fears on many levels. “Many have told me that they are somehow moved by my work or that the image becomes stuck in their head 鈥 but they don鈥檛 know why. There doesn鈥檛 appear to be any obvious reason for this, which can itself be paradoxical or disturbing.”

His paintings are a combination of figuration and abstraction, creating a subtle provocative tension between the bold formal qualities and the often intimate figurative content that emerge through their abstract layers. Stephen subverts the recognisable and allows the familiar to become strange through odd juxtapositions and details. Ultimately, however, his paintings leave the viewer to develop their own meanings from their layered images and illogical compositions.

Stephen has several exhibitions in the pipeline, and will be represented in January 2016 at the by Abbey Walk Gallery, at stand G38.

For further information please contact Gill or Elaine at Abbey Walk Gallery on 01472 241007, art@abbeywalkgallery.com, .

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Credits
1.聽Stephen Newton, Installation view, 2015. Courtesy of the artist and Abbey Walk Gallery.