This solo exhibition was developed through Pratt’s AHRC Fellowship entitled ‘Blind Faith - Exploring the Effects of an Objective Attention to Detail on the Painting Process’, Pratt drew parallels between theory, painting-processes and thought, and an amnesiac way of working was proposed. By utilising a myopic proximity to the surface and a systematic approach to image-making, the investigation centred on breaking down the flow of time into a series of instants. The innate physical behaviour of paint as raw matter is as important as Pratt’s manipulation of it; the exhibition title, ‘Pell Mell,’ reflects the notion of chance and game playing, with the parallel situations of accident and subsequent re-roganisation. The playful titles of the pa...
This group exhibition presents a selection of recent works by fifteen British artists that demonstra...
The project explored the hypothesis that meaning, within contemporary painting practice, is embedded...
Painting Fo'Sho! explores what happens when an artist concerned with the shifting cultural signifier...
This solo exhibition was developed through Pratt’s AHRC Fellowship entitled ‘Blind Faith - Exploring...
I contributed 14 paintings I had made in 2008 to this solo exhibition, displayed on both floors of t...
Catalogue and essay for Bick’s 2005 Solo exhibition at Hales Gallery London. The catalogue and group...
This project emerged from my interest in the materiality of painting. Initial research identified ar...
This solo exhibition aimed at examining my works in comparison to a wider construct of contemporary ...
Winner of the £30,000 prize selected by Judith Collins, Sacha Craddock, Declan McGonagle, John Spurl...
Titled 'The Craft', this exhibition employed the inventive re-use of popular material from daily lif...
My viva voce examination was held at the Royal College of Art, 11th April 2018, in the Sackler Build...
What is the aesthetic potential of considering painting as an event, analogous to a game, in which t...
“I never thought I’d see you again” is not exactly about history painting. Neither obliged to any st...
This group exhibition curated by John Bunker and myself aimed at an overview of contemporary British...
3 inter-disciplinary artworks by Mosscrop (Everything Is Everything; Theory and Practice; and To Hea...
This group exhibition presents a selection of recent works by fifteen British artists that demonstra...
The project explored the hypothesis that meaning, within contemporary painting practice, is embedded...
Painting Fo'Sho! explores what happens when an artist concerned with the shifting cultural signifier...
This solo exhibition was developed through Pratt’s AHRC Fellowship entitled ‘Blind Faith - Exploring...
I contributed 14 paintings I had made in 2008 to this solo exhibition, displayed on both floors of t...
Catalogue and essay for Bick’s 2005 Solo exhibition at Hales Gallery London. The catalogue and group...
This project emerged from my interest in the materiality of painting. Initial research identified ar...
This solo exhibition aimed at examining my works in comparison to a wider construct of contemporary ...
Winner of the £30,000 prize selected by Judith Collins, Sacha Craddock, Declan McGonagle, John Spurl...
Titled 'The Craft', this exhibition employed the inventive re-use of popular material from daily lif...
My viva voce examination was held at the Royal College of Art, 11th April 2018, in the Sackler Build...
What is the aesthetic potential of considering painting as an event, analogous to a game, in which t...
“I never thought I’d see you again” is not exactly about history painting. Neither obliged to any st...
This group exhibition curated by John Bunker and myself aimed at an overview of contemporary British...
3 inter-disciplinary artworks by Mosscrop (Everything Is Everything; Theory and Practice; and To Hea...
This group exhibition presents a selection of recent works by fifteen British artists that demonstra...
The project explored the hypothesis that meaning, within contemporary painting practice, is embedded...
Painting Fo'Sho! explores what happens when an artist concerned with the shifting cultural signifier...