Making art is like running with your eyes shut,
you must
take risks and rely on your instincts.
Julian Opie
Described as “the master of the stick figure” British artist
Julian Opie likes to make things as simple and as easy as possible.
As he told dazeddigital.com’s
John-Paul
Pryor “You know
there is a tendency to feel that in order for something to be important that
it's got to be difficult, and I tend to go the other way. My instincts are
always to do what’s easiest – that’s just a rule that I follow and it means
that you often end up making things that some people, and even I myself can
feel a little dubious about. When people find out that I use photography as the
basis for my portraits you can see that they feel a slight sense of
disappointment, but frankly a photograph makes it a hell of a lot easier and we
all know that the Dutch painters in the 17th century used the Camera Obscura
when they could. So what I found, after a while, was that mimicking the
computer look was a lot easier by simply using a computer. So I kind of taught
myself vector drawing, and the way that works is via a process of cut and
build, cut and build – you put pieces of rope around something, and you can
make it thicker or darker, then you fill it with color – it’s a constructive
Lego-type system of drawing.”
Universally known
as the artist who reduces reality to outlines filled with color Opie
appropriates the signage of flat pack furniture instructions for his landscapes
whilst his figures look like they have stepped off toilet doors. For as he
explained to the Guardian
Newspapers Dominic
Murphy "People are very suspicious
once they know something is art. I wanted to defuse that moment of suspicion so
that people are given the chance to enter the work visually before worrying
about whether it is art or whether they are supposed to like it."
Working across painting, sculpture and computer art Opie
brings the everyday and its inhabitants into the gallery. As he told Today’s
Zaman “I can only work on [real]
people. I can’t just imagine them. These are people that I know. I can only
work with contemporary people, not dead people. It is inevitable that everybody
I draw has a contemporary feeling. I also think that it would be strange not to
draw the world around you because this is the world I know. I don’t like
idealization, such as in the ancient sculptures of gods. I like realistic
[depictions]; [they’re] more exciting, more mysterious.
And as for the use of computers in his work, Opie has said “Art is always technology. Even if you put
paint on [your] mouth and blew like they did 20,000 years ago, that’s
technology. The trick is to do something good with it. I use both my hand and
the computer. I don’t think one is better than the other.”
Opie’s current self-titled exhibition is on show at Zurich’s
Galerie Bob van Orsouw
until the 31st of July.
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