Graeme
Todd Blank Frank
15 April - 29 May 2010 Private View:
Wednesday 14 April, 6–8pm |
Blank Frank has a memory that’s as cold as an iceberg,
The only time he speaks is in incomprehensible proverbs
Mummery + Schnelle is pleased to announce an exhibition of the
work of Graeme Todd.
Graeme Todd listens to a lot of experimental music from the
1970s. The title chosen for his exhibition, Blank Frank, makes
reference to a track on Brian Eno’s 1973 album Here Come
the Warm Jets that was a comment on the impenetrable nature
of collaborator Robert Fripp and prefigures the subsequent,
and equally impenetrable, ‘oblique strategies’ of
the pair’s later icy cold ambient works. The painted products
of Todd’s own peculiar strategies are unverifiable visual
fantasies that parallel the alchemical aural (con)fusion of
the drones, tape loops and psychedelic synthesizers of German
Kosmische Musik - an anti-gravitational motorik along the autobahns
of a many layered collective memoryscape.
Todd’s works are painted palimpsests, the scoured surfaces
of which, slashed, spattered and stained, are covered with bravura,
non-hierarchical patterning that enables us to read back through
the many different strata that the artist creates with pen,
ink, paint and varnish on plywood and mdf supports. The stains
of scattered poppy seeds litter his logbook of half forgotten,
deep frozen, opium tinged dreams. Todd’s surfaces communicate
an idea of space rather than being a literal representation
of it. His spatial schemes subvert conventional relationships
of scale by simultaneously employing the microscopic and the
cosmic, combining substrata and extensions of infinite space.
Todd’s marks coalesce and dissolve like the disincarnate
actions of free-floating figures or the random bounces of screen-saver
entropy. Quoting Leo Steinberg’s comment about Jackson
Pollock’s paintings, Todd says, while pointing at his
painting Blank Frank, “you could fly a space ship through
this”. He raids Lucio Fontana’s “art for the
Space Age” for its patterns of vertical slashes and the
compositional ambiguity provided by the sculpted frames of the
teatrini series (1964-66), where both illustrative and abstract
elements co-exist.
Graeme Todd lives and works in Dunbar, which is not very far
from the small town of Duns where the philosopher John ‘Duns’
Scotus was born, probably in 1266. Scotus argued that there
must be some sensory context for any act of intellectual cognition.
In order for the intellect to make use of sensory information
it must first take the raw material provided by the senses in
the form of material images and make them into suitable objects
for understanding. These material images Scotus called “phantasms”.
There are phantasms in Graeme Todd’s paintings - drawings
of objects such as trees, rocks or buildings - that help anchor
his otherwise disparate visual cacophonies and, perhaps, suggest
ways in which knowledge of them might be reached. Phantasm was
also the name of a short lived LA thrash metal band, who’s
distorted guitar sound had a precursor in the experimental music
of 70s groups such as Neu! and King Crimson, something that
loops us nicely back to where we started.
Graeme Todd was born in Glasgow in 1962. |


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