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By: Mark Walker
Ba (hons) Painting. Course Leader: Dan Sturgis.
mawalker.co.uk
Born in Nottingham now studying Painting in Camberwell. Artistic Practise is concerned with iconoclasm, transgression and humor within art.
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Mark Walker, 'Oliver Cromwell, Xmas Tree (unfinished)', 2010. Courtesy: the artist. A Prototype and unfinshed work concerning Oliver Cromwell, based on Renato bertellis' Continuous profile of Mussolini (1933.)
# 1 [1 May 2010]
My practice is an exploration of iconoclastic devices within painting. I have been exploring various ways to use the destruction of art and (the breaking of) the icon to make artworks that deal with the traditions and histories of painting. I am interested in the conflict between going to great lengths to make work and the very deliberate act of vandalization. With this I am also interested in the dividing line between vandalism, destruction and damaging of work deemed as mindless and ignorant, and iconoclasm, where the destruction and damaging of work is though of as important. I have been exploring making work that has the prospect to be damaged by the viewer in an act of participation and I have been investigating works that are destroyed violently and then the residual broken remains of what I have created are displayed creating a paradox between the dedication and time put into the work and the quick crude and violent destruction of the work. I have also been exploring work that is not damaged but uses satire and subversion to attack icons.
The use of paint is important to my practice; this varies from oil paint to more modern materials such as acrylic paint and older techniques such as egg tempera. The point of departure for my work comes from my interest in the uses of paint liberated from the flat surface, so I am free to use the support for painting as an object and involve it in the work. This reveals the physical aspects of my paintings and how this changes the viewers’ reaction to the work.
In recent projects the role of the artist behind the work as a creator of myth and explorer of the miraculous and how this is connected to failure has also become an aspect of my work that I am beginning to investigate further.
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Mark Alan Walker, 'Oliver Cromwell Xmas Tree', 2010. Courtesy: The artist.
# 2 [9 May 2010]
This is a development of my piece 'Oliver Cromwell Xmas tree' I have been trying to find ways to display the piece so that it was not just placed on a plinth and had a platform that would become part of the work. This is the solution I have chosen for this head. I have placed it on an old bar stool with a turn table installed in it so that the head rotates.
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Mark Alan Walker, 'Roundheads (unfinished)', acrylic paint, 2010. Photo: -. Courtesy: the artist. studio shot of heads after last coat of paint.
# 3 [23 May 2010]
I have made and painted 5 more Continuous Profiles of Oliver Cromwell, this time with more detain in the hair, with a wart and a darker green. I have decided to display them using cardboard postal tubes as plinths and need to get them secure so they don't fall over.
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Mark Alan Walker, 'Roundhead', acrylic paint, plaster & cardboard tube, 2010. Photo: James Champion. Courtesy: the artist. Continuous profile of Oliver Cromwell that spins, on a cardboard tube.
# 4 [5 June 2010]
Degree show has been installed.
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Even as a still photograph I can feel the spin. Very successful.
posted on 2010-06-06 by revad David Riley
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Mark Walker, 'Non-Death, Non-Objectivity', Mixed, August 2010. Photo: Mark Walker. Courtesy: The artist. Rotating cardboard skull diagram on oak underneath Malevich on his deathbed icon.
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Mark Walker, 'Non-Death, Non-Objectivity (details)', Mixed, August 2010. Photo: Mark Walker. Courtesy: The artist. Non-Death, Non-Objectivity (details)
# 5 [23 September 2010]
This is the first piece of work I made after finishing studying at Camberwell College of Art. The work was made for a group show of graduate, at the Former Alliance Gallery, Peckham, London.
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Hi Mark its the Degrees unedited online editor here. Just to let you know I have used on of your images in the following article: "What's in store with Degrees unedited" http://www.a-n.co.uk/degrees_unedited/article/569136 - give it a read!! Also - I know you haven't blogged all too much on here but I do want to thank you for your contribution your work looks really good! the images are great! Have you thought of using Artists talkng now you have graduated?
posted on 2010-09-27 by Richard Taylor