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Rivesaltes Project

By: Jonathan Moss

I am a painter / video-artist interested in landscape and the "sense of place". I am particularly drawn to landscapes with a hidden history; a lot of my work is inspired by a WW2 concentration camp situated next to my studio in France.

I work in a rural part of the Pyrenees whilst trying to have a foot in a wider art scene.

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'My studio', May 2011.

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'My studio', May 2011.

# 81 [10 May 2011]

Yesterday was a momentous occasion - all the paintings I have been working on for the past few months are now ready for exhibiting. I can relax a little now.

It feels like the end of a chapter - I suppose I view a short burst of creativity, where all the paintings are closely linked, to recording an album.

Also, in a sense, they belong in my studio, remnants of the frantic activity that has recently gone on and will be taken out of context when they are shown in galleries. The paintings represent what I'm interested in at this particular time and now I can move on to something else. The exciting thing is, I don't know what is to come in the coming months.

I photographed everything and was really pleased to see them on the computer screen, somehow you view them differently reproduced and it helps assess them. One in particular stood out to me... my studio looks a tip, the painting is one I've not given much attention to since it was finished, but the painting photographed grabbed my attention.

 

'My work showing in a local chapel'.

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'My work showing in a local chapel'.

'Great work by alleged perpetrator of the hate mail'.

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'Great work by alleged perpetrator of the hate mail'.

'"Encore de Merde!"'.

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'"Encore de Merde!"'.

# 82 [6 June 2011]

I feel a new level of recognition has started in my artistic career - I received some hate mail yesterday.

It came through the post - a page from a catalogue of an exhibition I'm showing in - it really did make me laugh, not only has the perpetrator scrawled all over the images, but gone to the effort to place a sticker over my works so the the word 'Merde' can be seen clearly - you couldn't make it up... 'and even more shit' on the video still.

The curators know it's someone they rejected during the exhibition selection process. Well, I know my work's not easy, but I've taken it as a compliment that they've gone to all that effort.

On a more positive note, I've had some great feedback on the 'Book / Art' show curated by Silvie Turner that finishes today; lots of people have really liked my book and would have bought a copy had it been available to buy. And, tomorrow, the 'Time Out of Mind' exhibition starts in Camberwell - the PV is on Friday and I'm looking forward to going.

I also submitted a video for 'One Minute Vol. 5' organised by Kerry Baldry. I was selected last year for this touring show and thought they'd be a slim chance two years in a row, but last week heard that she wants to include my work again. The showreel travels to some fantastic venues and festivals all over the world, so I'm keen to see what's in store this year.

All these good things going on further afield, but I'm also a firm believer in being known where you live, that's why I think it's a good idea to show my 'shit' in the local event. I received this email from one of the curators about the hate mail:

"we think it is *****.
(she is mad)
keep smiling..."

Again, I laughed, but sadly that may be true - I'm keen to write back to her though to tell her that I, on the other hand, really like her work: quirky, naively-drawn characters inhabiting a make-believe world of glowing flowers and psychedelic colours. Maybe it is good to air your views rather than bottling them up inside - the anonymity of the note suggests she is just a little bitter though.

# 83 [6 July 2011]

I've just returned from the opening of a show of my work in a museum north of Toulouse. I think it went well, lots of people wanted to talk to me about my videos, paintings and prints, but it did seem a strange experience as it was the culmination of months of work creating new paintings and oddly, seeing them hung, I felt a little removed from the situation as if I were viewing work by another artist.

To help the understanding of the context of my work, I made a small speech (in French!!!!).

"- So, what do I paint?

I have an obsession with beautiful surfaces and with the contrast between light and dark, those works are objects that have evolved over a long period of time - months playing with paint in my studio.

Layers and layers of paint are applied and then rubbed away, many times. I live with the works and usually have a battle with them to find that elusive something that makes them strong images that hold the viewer's attention. They are not easy images to make...

When are they finished? They really are the results of a long process, snapshots of a period of my life - akin to a journey and I have to decide when I have reached the destination.

- When I am asked by strangers what I paint, I usually tell them 'lines'... obviously they expect something like: hills, people, flowers. But to paint a line sounds obscure... but it isn't. All of these works have their origin in my experience of nature. I paint what I see with my eyes... I used to paint landscapes (evident in some of the large prints), now I paint zooms of landscapes, close-ups, but not taken directly from the tangible world, taken from my videos of that world.

The videos are not what you expect, they are not manipulated images, just video-walks in nature. Close-up images of grass, stones, rocks, water...

My paintings are based on those images, journeys in nature, but removed from our usual understanding of it.

- So, what will you take away with you from this exhibition?

You can view them as aide-memoires - something to trigger a distant, fleeting memory or feeling of a place you may have visited through the minutiae of nature: uneven, weathered stone textures, cracks in rocks, dry earth, moving grass and trees, drips revealing the passage of time - the elegance and simplicity of nature pared down to its essential components.

- I hope you enjoy the show and perhaps return to experience it in a quieter atmosphere and maybe allow yourself to be lost in the world I've created."

The curator was very pleased with how it looked and has a few ideas to help promote my work... one of them being for me to exhibit at a friend's gallery in Dubai - she thinks my work will go down well in Muslim countries due to its abstract nature - why didn't I think of that?

Looking ahead now... I'm off to New York in a couple of weeks time with my wife; it will be a great opportunity to create a new body of work. The guy we're staying with has some crazy ideas about getting me an exhibition in the Chrysler Building! Any building would be good enough for me!!

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Comments on this post

Yes the hate-mail was tastefully done!!! Thanks for looking and also I've been really tied up with exhibitions and the other projects... will be in touch properly v.soon. I hope your projects are going well. Bon courage!

posted on 2011-07-08 by Jonathan Moss

Hi Jonathan, so glad to hear your news and catch up a bit. I've been thinking of you even though I haven't contacted you in yonks - busy doesn't begin to describe!! So glad your opening went well and Chapeau! for doing a speech in French - terrifying isn't it?! Good for you for being so good natured about the hate mail. I actually like the profaned catalogue page. It's a shame to be so bitter. Hope you have a great time in New York and hopefully I'll be emailing you soon....

posted on 2011-07-08 by Jane Boyer

'NYC 1', Video Still.

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'NYC 1', Video Still.

# 84 [14 August 2011]

Just finished this video, filmed in Toys'R'Us in Times Square, NYC - I was almost thrown out by a security guard! The lights on the wall next to the escalator reminded me of a Dan Flavin installation and was just waiting to be filmed...

 

New York was such an amazing experience - didn't visit one gallery (fed up I didn't have time to see the Alexander McQueen), but filmed constantly and took hundreds of Lomo photos. So, it looks like I'm going to be busy editing over the coming weeks - good timing as I've just sprained my ankle, so not that mobile.

Some shows in the pipeline, hopefully they'll come off, who knows?

NYC 1. Times Square by Jonathan Moss

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I'm glad you like my video - hopefully it will be one of a series. Generally people weren't that keen to be filmed, nor photographed, I'm lucky to have gotten away with it. Working on some more videos today, mostly of flashing lights though... weird that out of everything in NYC, that's what grabbed my attention. Hope you're okay, I'll contact you soon with a proper message!

posted on 2011-08-15 by Jonathan Moss

Hi Jonathan, good to hear you had a great time in NYC - it's a great place to visit. I like your video, so primary and so primal. I'm not surprised you were nearly thrown out by a security guard. I think we, meaning Americans and Europeans have different ideas of what is allowable to film. My British friend thinks nothing of taking snapshots of products in store to remember price or design type etc. She does it purely as a reminder to herself. Whereas, I would never dream of doing such a thing because it has been ingrained that this is unacceptable bordering on illegal! Hope your ankle heals quickly - but maybe you want the time to work(!) Cheers.

posted on 2011-08-14 by Jane Boyer

'NYC II 42nd to 19th video still'.

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'NYC II 42nd to 19th video still'.

# 85 [23 August 2011]

Editing the videos from NYC has allowed me to lose myself in great memories...

The visuals are ready, I just need to work on the audio. The video I uploaded to vimeo this evening sticks out a little from the others, it has audio that seems to work well, but images that may need to be tweaked.

It's a video-walk from 42nd Street (Times Square) to 19th Street (where I was staying) - I followed the line of the pavement relentlessly, so everyone had to move out of my way, I wasn't popular.

I was initially grabbed by the 'line' falling across the screen, but now I've finished the first cut it is actually the 'grid' that appears regularly that looks really interesting. So, I may do another cut tomorrow, featuring just the grid.

 

# 86 [23 September 2011]

I've just been snatching the odd minute here and there during the past few weeks to finish off my videos and soundtracks started in NYC, other commitments getting in the way.

Considering the lack of quality time to dedicate to my work, the results have been surprising. The most exciting aspect has been creating sound that works with the images. I mostly adapted field recordings, adopting a similar approach to the one I use for video editing.

Never knowing the end result and letting the creative process guide the outcome has allowed each video to take on a life of its own... strangely similar to the way I paint.

I do bear in mind though that I may just be making the best of the material I have and if I had set out to make the videos (in their final form) they may be very different and perhaps more successful, but that seems to be the job of a film-maker, not an experimental video-artist.

 

 

# 87 [1 November 2011]

Hello everyone who clicked the link on Stramash Space. I'm pretty chuffed that Kim Walker chose to feature my new videos on their site this week.

I hope you find them interesting, hopefully something for everyone! It seems weird that the random footage I made of neon lights and New York streets has now evolved into a finished body of work.

One regret I have is not taking a tripod with me... how stupid; I took loads of wobbly stuff which I couldn't use, next time: fewer pairs of socks!

Some of the imagery is a departure for me, but I'm thinking it will lead to a new phase in my painting too.

It's been a while now since I finished them and I haven't yet viewed them as a series, so I'm looking forward to looking at them later when the kids are in bed.

I've been thinking about the pros and cons of an online show... on the negative side the viewer may just flick through with the sound down whilst watching TV; on the positive side they may allow themselves to be totally absorbed in the images and sounds, closing themselves off from the outside world (something that's difficult to do in a gallery environment). 

Potentially more people can view an online show and perhaps one of the greatest pros is that the viewer can interact with the artist (which I find a little ironic given the remote and virtual nature of the exhibition in comparison with a physical exhibition which is supposedly more 'personal').

I'd be pleased if anyone wants to leave feedback, thoughts, reactions...

http://www.stramashspace.org/exhibitions/current.html

'My new studio'.

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'My new studio'.

# 88 [10 January 2012]

Internet access has been difficult since I moved unfortunately, but it has allowed me to dedicate more time to renovating the house. (Internet now sorted thankfully.)

Today I finished painting my new studio - small, but just big enough to paint the new 180 x 200 cm canvases for a show in New York; it will be a tight squeeze and that floor may be a distraction, but it's better than the corner of a bedroom.

I mentioned to our new neighbour, a very sweet elderly lady, that I'm a painter by trade, not a professional DIYer and she very kindly said that she could arrange for my paintings to be shown in the local hairdresser's... I was touched by her kindness, I did explain that they are quite abstract, very large and not to everyone's taste. It's good to be known locally though, so I thought I'd introduce myself to the art school in Perpignan and see what emerges.

Just the facade of the house to paint now and the shutters, then on with the real paintings which I'm itching to start, it's been too long now.

'Jonathan Moss', Cyanotype.

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'Jonathan Moss', Cyanotype.

Cyanotype.

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Cyanotype.

'Jonathan Moss', Cyanotype.

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'Jonathan Moss', Cyanotype.

'Jonathan Moss', Cyanotype.

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'Jonathan Moss', Cyanotype.

'Jonathan Moss', Cyanotype.

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'Jonathan Moss', Cyanotype.

# 89 [24 February 2012]

I've been enjoying playing with cyanotypes over the last few days. The paper was in a Sigur Ros box-set to promote their new live album 'Inni' that I was given for Christmas. Once the photos have been made you can upload them to their website and then fans vote on the best ones.

Initially I wanted to place the light-sensitive paper on the computer screen showing my video stills... of course this didn't work, which was a shame. So I opted to follow the usual technique of placing objects over the paper in sunlight. I nicked some ideas from the artists who showed at the V&A "Shadow Catchers" exhibition which has just closed...

Firstly I placed some palm leaves on the paper, I liked the pattern of lines... then it occured to me that I could make a pattern on glass and place the glass on the paper. With very few materials in my small, makeshift studio I raided the kitchen: flour and olive oil. I literally used it as I do paint and created a drippy type surface - the results are spookily similar to my paintings.

I'm now thinking that I'm onto something exciting here... plus the kids would love to be involved too - just like magic.

If nobody votes for my images on the Sigur Ros site at least I've been inspired.

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Thanks for the comment Clare - I'm going to order some more paper, larger and do some more experiments, a lot of mileage in them I think.

posted on 2012-03-12 by Jonathan Moss

Hi Jonathan, I like these prints, they have a microscopic image look about them and interesting blues..they sound really fun to produce.

posted on 2012-03-11 by Clare Maynard

'Dot to dash', Video still.

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'Dot to dash', Video still.

Jonathan Moss

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Jonathan Moss

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Jonathan Moss

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# 90 [7 March 2012]

Collaborations can emerge from the strangest of places. A fellow guitarist who initially I knew only through guitar forums turns out to be a bonafide composer of contemporary 'sounds' - studied composition at Dartington where his tutorials were extraordinary: "the uncomfortable silence when I played my latest DADGAD musings on my guitar to my composition lecturer who specialised in concertos for wardrobes and carbon-fibre fishing rods... "lounge music" was all he said after about 5 minutes of waiting..."

Just by chance Michael mentioned that he has been working on a conceptual piece. For a guitarist quite well-known on the international 'folk' circuit (albeit, 'new folk', i.e. contemporary, cutting edge, but within the confines of the heritage of a six string instrument) I was quite surprised at this. At first I thought it was a joke... then as we exchanged emails it became clear that he has another existence as a creator of 'little sounds' as I call them.

He offered to make some music for my videos - I don't have anything on the go at the moment as I'm painting, but mentioned one video, in fact my first, that I recently resurrected and uploaded to Vimeo just last month. 

'Dot to Dash' is a simple video of the moon, shot in negative with a slow shutter speed; it takes on a life of its own - insect-like, crawling over the surface of the picture plane (video frame?). The addition of atmospheric audio creates a completely new dimension.

I'm really grateful to Michael and now we're eager to develop the idea... just got to wait for a full moon - well that's tomorrow, better charge the camera!

 

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Jonathan Moss

Currently I am painting and making videos in my studio in the French Pyrenees.

www.jonathan-moss.com