James Fox & James Nicholls
Hardcover | 27.5 x 1.4 x 22.5 cm | 118 pp
TMG Fine Arts | 2022 | 9781399933513
A monograph on British artist Tom Glynn featuring an essay by art historian and broadcaster Dr. James Fox.
Tom Glynn’s painting and sculpture explore the narrative of everyday events and issues, historical journeys, the paradox of objects, and the abstract qualities of both landscape and the built environment. Direct responses to landscape are significant recurring themes. Glynn works with a multitude of found objects, materials and techniques within the scope of painting and sculpture, in order to harness the mystery and visual excitement created by juxtaposition, visual memory and spatial. Themes and visual ideas often explore incongruity, archaeological qualities, visual ambiguity, pictorial and real space, political irony, symbol and humour, resulting in a wide range of outcomes made from expressively applied paint, collage, assemblage, wood and objets trouvés that yield a profusion of colour, texture, form and spatial complexities.
Glynn’s paintings and sculptures collectively represent a wide outlook upon contemporary issues and the human condition, exposing the placement of familiar everyday fragments revealed within spatial compositions that explore the fast-moving glimpses of the world that are often overlooked and forgotten. Glynn’s multi-surface paintings often explore this concern, while sculptural objects and assemblages explore the psychological force of dreams and memory – the conscious vis-à-vis unconscious as well as feeling and thought.
Born in 1956 in West Sussex, Glynn was educated at Farnham School of Art and went on to have a career as Head of Art at two leading academic independent schools and now practices full-time.