
Jason Martin presents a new body of paintings for his first exhibition at Lisson Gallery New York. The works on display continue Martin’s investigation of the fundamentals of painting, his experimentation beyond its traditional boundaries into three-dimensional space and his recent re-engagement with oil paint.
To produce these works, Martin begins with minimal means - no more than three colors, often similar in tonality, as well as just a handful of tools or brushes and a number of vertically aligned, aluminium panels. Despite these self- imposed limitations, Martin’s latest series veer from epic and luscious compositions of swirling dark oils to pared-down and muted abstractions in smoky off-whites. Formed of horizontal bands being swept to and fro across the surface, the paintings are loaded with varying quantities of paint, resulting perhaps in significant spillages, impasto ridges and arabesque whorls or else in smaller, incidental edges, ripples and smears. These parallel strata are built up from repeated, physical gestures - a process that Martin has honed since his days at Goldsmiths College in London in the early 1990s - although are created here, not by mechanical comb-like tools, but through precise and controlled gestures, albeit with the intervention of chance, moments of happenstance and the occasional swirl of chaos.
Far from monochromes, these works are subtly gradated essays in harmonic relationships between hues and are essentially mixed during their making, as evidenced by the subtitles to each work, which includes the color combination employed, such as: Titanium White, Dutch Brown and Scheveningen Blue. These tripartite pieces lend themselves to three or more ‘horizon lines’, although smaller panels, often composed of two colors, such as French Cassel Earth and French Ardoise Grey, are just as complex and involved as images - in fact the effects of individual gestures and their intensity are magnified at this concentrated scale.
Martin’s dense layering and over-painting does not preclude the abundance of internal light experienced in many works here, which are themselves progressions in both luminosity and restraint from the first exhibition of this body of work in London last year. While some of his paintings appear to be in continuous motion and flux, this show also furthers the distinction between passages of flattened ground versus Martin’s raised, striated line, highlighting the spatial and temporal rifts present on each surface.
About the artist
Jason Martin’s work oscillates between sculpture and painting, incapable of being assigned to a particular medium or movement. Composed with the vigour of action painting but executed by a controlled hand, this dynamism is most visible in early monochromatic paintings where paint was dragged across a variety of surfaces with a fine, comb-like piece of metal or board, creating rhythmic textures suggestive of the ridges in a vinyl record or the grain of feather. In his pure pigment works, vivid colour is applied to moulded panels, whose baroque, velvety contortions appear like an extreme close-up of a painter’s palette. These raw, worked surfaces find their equal in Martin’s recent paintings, which showcase a painterly return to the more traditional approach of oil on canvas. Born in 1970 in Jersey, in the Channel Islands, Jason Martin has had solo exhibitions throughout Europe, the United States and Japan including: Schauwerk Sindelfingen Museum, Germany, 2016; Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, Italy, 2009; Centro de Arte Contemporàneo de Malaga, Spain, 2008, and Städtische Galerie Nordhorn, Germany, 1998. His work is held in numerous international public collections including the Government Art Collection, UK; Denver Art Museum, Colorado, USA; Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC; Städtische Galerie Nordhorn, Germany and the Museum of Modern Art, La Spezia, Italy. Martin lives and works between London and Portugal.
Jason Martin effects oscillations between sculpture and painting, with the vigour of action painting but a controlled hand. He is perhaps best known for his monochromatic paintings, where layers of oil or acrylic gel are dragged across hard surfaces such as aluminium, stainless steel or Plexiglas with a fine, comb-like piece of metal or board in one movement, often repeated many times. Striations catch the light, their rhythmic textures suggestive of the ridges in a vinyl record, strands of wet hair, the grain of a feather – and whose titles flirt with association (Comrade, Amphibian, Corinthian). Martin does away with paint altogether in his wall-mounted casts of copper, bronze and nickel, whose surfaces are unctuous but frozen. In pure pigment works, vivid colour is applied to moulded panels, whose baroque contortions appear like an extreme close-up of a painter’s palette. These raw, worked surfaces find their equal and opposite in the recent sculpture Behemoth, 2012, where the object (a huge cubic pile of cork on the floor) is impregnated with black pigment, rendering it a mass of surface.




Established in 1967 in London, Lisson Gallery is one of the most well-known galleries operating globally. Boasting an influential and continuing legacy, including playing a pivotal role in the careers of many pioneers of historically important art movements, the gallery works with some of the most significant contemporary artists today.

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