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Prints

Chris Pig

Education:

Hertfordshire College of Art and Design, (foundation course)
Exeter College of Art and Design – BA(Hons) Art and Design 2:1
Winchester College of Art – MA(Soton)

Selected Exhibitions:

2009

Originals 09, joint winner of the Society of Wood Engravers’ award along with Hilary Paynter.

2008

Winner, “Drawing the City” open competition for the residents of Hackney

2007

IMPRESSED - group show of original prints with M.C. Escher, Anne Desmet and Fernando Feijoo, Vinson Gallery
Workshop at the Atlanta Printmaker’s Studio
Lecture: The Life of a Printmaker at SCAD Atlanta

2005

Jealousy a one-man show of engravings, etchings and linocuts, Vinson Gallery

2004

Made in England: 4 British Printmakers, Vinson Gallery
ATLart[04], Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, Atlanta

2001

National Print Open, Mall Galleries, London
Show with Julius Breeze, Fitzroy Galleries, Melbourne, Australia
Atrophy, group show, The Forge, Shoreditch, London

2000

National Print Open, Mall Galleries, London
Cumberland Paper Mills Award for a Printmakerof Outstanding Merit B&Wx3YBA, group show, Vinson Gallery

1999

Group Show, Start Gallery, Fulham, London
National Print Open, Mall Galleries, London

1998

Group Show, Start Gallery, Fulham, London
Empty Bottles, Full Ashtrays, Solo Show, Sussex Arts Club, Brighton
Solo Show, The Rosemary Branch, Islington, London

1997

Group Show, Sussex Arts Club, Brighton

1996

Show with Julie Bennett, Vincent Gallery, Exeter

1995

Stoke Newington Festival, Solo Show and Group Show

1994

“Artists in Spain”, Stormont Studio, Rye, East Sussex

1993

Open Studios, Barcelona, Spain
MA Group Show, British Institute, Barcelona, Spain
MA Final Show, Winchester School of Art

1992

“Low Life”, Solo Show, Vincent Gallery, Exeter

1990

Show with Julie Bennett, Harlequins Centre, Exeter

 

Publications:

I couldn’t Paint Golden Angels, autobiography of Albert Meltzer
Despite Anything, short stories and other writings by Mark Whittaker
Featured in Bringing Print to Atlanta Printmaking Today, winter 2006
Starting From Scratch, Article about setting-up a studio in Spain, Printmaking Today, Summer 2005
Making His Mark, review by Felicia Feaster, Creative Loafing, Atlanta
Culture Surfing, interview, Creative Loafing, Atlanta
Beautifully Revealing, Concealing, by Jerry Cullum, Atlanta Journal
Ambit Magazine, summer 2006, front cover and five-page spread
Ambit Magazine, autumn 2006, five page spread
Outcasts come out of the dark Review by Catherine Fox, Atlanta Journal.

Represented by:

  • Vinson Gallery
  • Decatur,Georgia, USA
  • Stone and Press Gallery, New Orleans, USA
  • Wharepuke Print Studio and Gallery, Kerikeri, New Zealand

Personal Statement

I’ve been printmaking almost ever since I can remember; I made my first etching plate when I was about fourteen or fifteen and little else has interested me ever since.  Since childhood as well, I have been interested in representing the world around me; specifically narrative situations that sum up the human condition.  My work vacillates between these narrative images and those that are devoid of narrative and concerned with aesthetics.

 

Articles

Making his Mark
By Felicia Feaster

Making art isn't supposed to be a risky business, but British artist Chris Pig says that on several occasions, his sketches have led to ugly confrontations.
Sitting in cafes in London or Spain, Pig generally works on three sketches at a time, turning his attention from one subject to the next when someone senses his gaze is lingering too long.
At times, his subjects have grown wary of his lingering appraisals and confronted him, suspecting something perverse and sexual in his intense concentration. Those people Pig chooses as his subjects may have good reason to feel uneasy, though not for the reasons they might suspect.
Pig has a gimlet-eyed, jaded knack for capturing the peculiar vanities and brutalities of the human animal.
The people eventually transposed from these sketches into linocuts are caught between the crosshairs of Pig's scathing, often misanthropic read on human specimens, such as the bald and pendulously gutted man sitting in a Spanish bar in "Name Your Price." Pig's prints are packed with information, from his elaborately detailed textures of woodwork, skin and other surfaces, to the telling gesture or physical feature that sets his psychological stage. In "Name Your Price," he conveys the man's aura of peacock macho vanity with his shirt provocatively unbuttoned and his Vienna sausage fingers laced with numerous gold rings gripping a ludicrously dainty wine glass.
A resident of Cordova, Spain, for the past four years, Pig's previous haunt was the London borough of Hackney's Murder Mile, where he watched assorted thug wars from his terrace above the street. Two of the most striking and memorable works in his show Jealousy, at Vinson Gallery, are portraits of career rabble-rousers. "Made in England" features a tattooed, shaved brute resting a baseball bat on his overinflated biceps. "Vigilante" features another street fighter with an oft-broken nose and a well-seasoned machete at the ready. Pig's best work is psychological and dark, with shades of Lucian Freud and the 18th-century satirist of human malfeasance William Hogarth. Pig's less appealing work fugues on art history convention: still life prints of artichokes, zaftig female nudes and two lovers locked in a stylized embrace.
The work is undeniably best when the slightly antiquated, ornate style of Pig's prints rubs up against his astute and humorous observations.

Outcasts come out of the dark; tiny vistas tower
By Catherine Fox

It is fitting that British printmaker Chris pig works in black and white: The world he creates in his recent prints evokes film noir.

The linocuts at Vinson Gallery feature characters like the brazen gypsy who stares down the viewer in ”The Whore of Destiny” and the shadowy guy who keeps his cards and his gun on the table in “Who Killed Sugarbaby?” The old soul in the romantic “Papuna” seem to be hiding a mysterious back story behind his careworn expression. There’s even something slightly menacing about Pig’s print of an artichoke.

Pig is a master of stagecraft.  “Sugarbaby” plays homage to a murdered British anarchist, but the other characters are his fiction.  The gypsy is a friend playing dress up, and Papuna is a Russian born musical instrument salesman in Decatur, whom Pig befriended at a bar.

He accentuates the drama through lighting and set design.  In “Sugarbaby,” for example, he reduces the composition to simple shapes, largely circles and ovals.  A single searing ceiling light illuminates the man and the table.  “The Whore of Destiny” is a bravura orchestration of patterns.

The crisp lines, bottomless black planes and complex details in these prints demonstrate his technical command.  His play with figure/ground recalls M.C. Escher who’s prints are also on view in this group show, but is also related to the Moorish decorative elements he fell in love with in Cordoba, Spain.

Websites

www.chrispig.com
www.vinsongallery.com