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Martha 2002
woodcut, edition 8
64 x 71cm
£450 ex vat
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T O M - H A M M I C K
1963
born in Tidworth, UK
1982-85
University of Manchester, BA Hons Art History
1987-90
Camberwell College of Art, BA Hons Fine Art
1990-92
Camberwell College of Art, MA Printmaking.
Collections
Arts Council of Northern Ireland; British Museum , Prints & Drawings;
Yale Center for British Art, CT, USA; De Beers, London; British Copyright
Council; Deutsche Bank AG, London; Arthur Andersen PLC; British Midland;
BZW Bank, London; The Conquest Hospital, Hastings; Chelsea and Westminster
Hospital, London; The Royal London Hospital; Dorchester Hospital; St
Mary's University, Nova Scotia; Clifford Chance, London; DLA, London;
Merryl Lynch, London; Bank of Montreal, Canada; The Art Gallery of Nova
Scotia, Canada;
Washington University Medical Centre, Seattle
"Like Morandis still lifes, Hammicks small canvases
have the negative virtue of unpretentiousness: all they seem to insist
upon is that a certain person performed certain acts of looking and
of making. A small private assertion - which turns out to count for
quite a lot. Also like Morandi, Hammick clearly takes relish in his
oils, with their creamy slippery clots and glazes - but its the
pleasure with which someone hums a tune to himself, not that of hollering
it for all the streets to hear. So these quiet, rather tender acts of
concentration draw you in by commanding your moral respect ..."
Extract from Julian Bells review
Modern Painters, winter issue 1998
"It may sound a contradiction to say that painting is still, in
some way, about the struggle between two and three dimensions and in
figuration, about the relationship between figure and ground within
an overall atmosphere. Tom Hammick makes a kind of place and then paints
within it an internal discussion about the dominant subject. Although
often picturing a landscape or seascape, each space is still an accumulative,
made up, kind of place.
...The relationship between material and pattern and the outline of
the person is quite contradictory, awkward even.... Imagery is arrived
at, floated in
from everywhere to the canvas, which is, even before the first touch,
the metaphorical place for thought and projection. This, no easy post
modern point, is now even more true than ever as an accumulation of
imagery is already collaged, somehow, and wedged in the mind. Hammick,
troubled by what he sees as a 'reductionist' cannon in art, combines
the generously experiential with a dry insecurity.
The relationship most contemporary figurative, illusory painting has
to the printed paper image is very strong. Hammick is a keen printmaker.
He moves backwards and forwards through a range of media and has recently
worked consecutively on a series of giant woodcuts and paintings. This
simple interconnection with print allows a sort of by-mistake-on-purpose
attitude, the opportunity to
glimpse sideways at his own imagery. As well as cross referencing the
very relation to the unique, the whole process is enhanced by an ability
to be both inside and outside the making and seeing. The opportunity
to pursue the hidden point is enhanced by a direct relationship between
reproduction and first-hand affect."
Extract from catalogue text by Sacha Craddock
published for Tom Hammicks exhibition Homeland
at The Eagle Gallery April 2003.
for further information or orders email
info@emmahilleagle.com
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House in Moonlight 2002
woodcut, edition 10
105 x 82cm
£1,100 ex vat |
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