SELECTED WORKS BY David Thorpe
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David Thorpe
Kings of The Night
1998
Paper Collage
149 x 168cm |
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David Thorpe’s early collages exhibit all the painstaking labour of his involved process. Inspired by Victorian shadow puppets and Japanese woodcuts, Kings of the Night is deceiving in its complexity made simple. Constructed entirely from cut and pasted sheets of paper, David Thorpe uses only 5 colours to create this romantic scene of lonely South London tower blocks. Planning his image in ascending layers he creates an improbable sense of space: the buildings laid over sky, orange windows over buildings; each element convincingly self-contained and distanced with illusionary depth. The tress and plants are flawlessly cut in their doily-like intricacy from one solid sheet of card; the final details of a sublime world astoundingly reproduced in 2-dimensional kid-craft. |
David Thorpe
We Never Sleep
1998
Paper Collage
90 x 176cm |
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David Thorpe takes a leaf out of the home-craft manual and cuts coloured paper to project an idealised landscape that alludes more to an opening film shot of a city at night than the landscape in the painting. Inspired by daytime TV films, best selling paperbacks, and Japanese woodcut prints, David Thorpe constructs the sublime with cut and paste: scenes of urban isolation oozing sex appeal; 70s social architecture promising budget exotica. |
David Thorpe
Covenant of the Elect
2002
Mixed Media Collag
63 x 111 cm |
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David Thorpe crafts the sublime from scissors and glue – intricate scenes of urban paradise made up of precision cut layers of paper, reminiscent of Japanese woodcuts, or Casper David Friedrich paintings. |
David Thorpe
Do What You Have To Do
1998
Paper Cut-Out
142 x 170cm |
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David Thorpe is a young artist who lives and works in London. In Do What You Have To Do, Thorpe constructs a utopian setting of council blocks, giving a sense of awesome glamour to the banal, a leisurely chic to the two teenagers hanging out on the steps. |
David Thorpe
Forever
1998
Paper Collage
36 x 145cm |
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David Thorpe’s collages present a spiritual chic of urban romanticism: inner city buildings rendered desolate and magnificent, are contemplations of the individual vs. the universe. This ‘power-of-one’ conviction is replicated through David Thorpe’s intensive process: each element is painfully stencilled with a penknife, and assembled with mind-boggling accuracy. Through his process, David Thorpe exemplifies the ability to create beauty from sheer will; macrocosms snipped from craft paper, the bedazzling sight of council flats on a still night. In a car passing over the bridge, David Thorpe silhouettes a tiny group of partying teenagers: a tribute to dandyism and eternal youth. |
David Thorpe
The Quiet Voice
2004
Mixed Media Collage
42 x 52cm |
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David Thorpe’s collages have become more abstracted; moving away from depictions of isolated urban-scapes, his most recent work embodies the same sentiments of spirituality, design, and nature, but strips away the representational aspect. Rather than envision the sublime outer world, The Quiet Voice operates as a self-contained fetish. David Thorpe capitalises on the tautology of his materials. Set in an occult-ish triangle, Thorpe arranges a plane of wood veneer, masked by a mesh of real twigs. The small black square punctuates the field like a window, giving the sense that this is a building viewed in extreme close-up. By painting faint circles over the collaged ground, David Thorpe enforces his object as a formalist model, made intimate and devotional by the string of beads dangling from its edge. |
David Thorpe
Fragile Resistance
2004
Plaster and Leather
59 x 15cm |
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“I'm playing with certain associations,” David Thorpe divulges, “slightly New Age, slightly Space Age, slightly threatening…I'm absolutely in love with people who build up their own systems of belief.” In Fragile Resistance, David Thorpe draws upon modernist principles of object-making as a means to reference a totalitarian concept of aesthetics. His abstract form is defined by its own materiality: moulded plaster emanates a barbaric bone-like delicacy, entwined by a skin of strips of leather. Fragile Resistance plays a double role, as both object of contemplation and totem of desire. |
David Thorpe
I Am Golden
2002
Mixed Media Installation
Dimensions Variable |
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David Thorpe’s sculptures evolved from his elaborate collaged paintings. They are increasingly concerned with using the physicality of materials to represent themselves. David Thorpe develops his sculptures to further explore the corporeality of his idea. Exchanging representation for actualisation, his sculptural work exists as artefacts plausibly plucked from his paintings and created in real-life. I Am Golden is Thorpe’s first foray into 3-dimensions. David Thorpe’s objects often merge formalist sculpture with functionality as a reiteration of the interconnectedness of ideology and lifestyle. In I Am Golden, mosaic tiled spheres form the basis of a miniature temple-like structure; the piece also doubles as a plant stand. By combining elements of real potted flowers with constructed decorative motifs, David Thorpe unites nature and artifice in a single utopian gesture. |
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ARTIST INFORMATION
ARTICLES
David Thorpe at Iterim Art.
Mark Sladen talks to artist David Thorpe about his recent work Good People.
Good People can be seen in David Thorpe's current exhibition at Interim Art in Bethnal Green. Thorpe (b 1972, London) is part of the wave of artists who emerged directly after the YBAs. He was noticed for his collages of intricately cut paper, which were featured in exhibitions such as Die Young Stay Pretty (ICA, 1998). Thorpe's current show includes a number of pictures featuring quirky Modernist buildings in wilderness settings. These works mark a stylistic departure for the artist, who has odified his collage technique to include not just paper but a host of other materials.
Mark Sladen: How did you go about making Good People?
David Thorpe: There is a vast variety of materials in there, as I was trying to get a sense of equivalents to the actual materials used in the architecture depicted, almost like a miniature building. The building in the picture is made out of very thick veneers - also oxidised copper, pebbles, Playdo, a little bit of net curtain.
MS: What interests you about using materials that are like the things represented?
DT: I wanted to get more hard-core about building my own world. I've always been interested in creating my own world and it seems like common sense that if I'm constructing a tree I should do it in bark. You can also get different spatial levels, starting with tissue paper, using harder materials as you build it up; and usually the materials also get thicker so it's like this shallow relief. The technique also seems appropriate to the subject matter - these obsessive, hick communities. These pictures are images of things, but they could also potentially be manufactured within these worlds. They could be the types of images that would be seen inside these buildings. I'm always trying to find equivalences between the subject matter and the materials, and as in the last few years the subject matter has become more esoteric so the materials have become odder.
Read the entire article
Source: kultureflash.net
David Thorpe Meyer Riegger, Karlsruhe
By Catherine Wood
In a recent text David Thorpe described the artist's aim using an extended metaphor of military defence strategy. For this show, 'The Colonists', the gallery's clean white rooms were cut up by intersecting mahogany screens, inset with thickly textured glass, which stood guard across its shopfront windows, obscuring visibility from the street.
The protected world within this ornamental fortress - itself embedded in the Karlsruhe landscape, with its surrounding forest of dark fir spires - is, however, intricate and generous. The fine detail of Thorpe's exquisitely constructed universe intimates love rather than the dull, earnest labour of some handmade figuration. The thickened surface of his collages militates against the easy consumption offered by Pop cultural images.
In Thorpe's earlier land- and cityscapes human scale is dwarfed by vast environment, implying an exaggeratedly diminished viewpoint. His third exhibition at Maureen Paley Interim Art, London in 2002 introduced new dimensions of sculpture and text into the work, but the current show marks a significant step in the resolution of Thorpe's project: from gazing up towards a world to being inside it.
Read the entire article
Source: frieze.co.uk
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