Detroit | James melloy NEWS


Detroit | James melloy

Leyden Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition of new paintings from James Melloy



The hi-gloss paint and aluminium ground of Melloys paintings obliquely traverse the idea of Detroit, in both visual and metaphoric terms. As a title for this exhibition of paintings, Detroit also summons to mind an industrial city known once as the hub of American car manufacture.

Customers can have their car in any colour as long as its black

Henry Ford

For one group of paintings in the show Melloy has decided to limit the use of colour to a tonally subdued palette of grey, Breton blue and deep blue. Whilst this choice implies a field of limitations it also resonates with the mass-produced; products not only belonging to a bygone age of commerce and industry, but also intersecting with the postmodern idea of a Warhol-style Factory output. The reassuring sense of a product is to be found in Melloys paintings as their use of gloss on metal suggests their manufactured quality. The slick final image is however complicated by insistent evidence of the hand in the work, these are not mechanical; the gesture remains that of the artist. Each painting contains at least a single completing brushstroke that in its movement across the plane, unifies, draws out the image, and coalesces to present a moment in time to reflect on.

The artist says that the colours for him also symbolise the meeting between optimism and melancholy. The production of the paintings and their finish - reverberating optimism in the colours, in the notion of rebirth and regeneration - are also found in the curvature of sleek automobiles with their optimism of the crisp shiny and new, whereas the degeneration and loss of what had been Detroit, proposes an underlying site of melancholy.

Detroit then, as a city, and a lost way of life, becomes the metaphor for Melloys work. It feels that something better might just burst through, that once again it will be the grassroots rebuilding that sees the humanity and optimism return to the city. The paintings, imbued with complex interpretations of the city further provoke urgent questions of austerity and production whilst speaking of the fragility of human existence.

About the author
Leyden Gallery is fast becoming known for its imaginative curation and forward-thinking programming of exhibitions and events. This young gallery - now in its third year - is firmly establishing itself as a 'diverse and insightful gallery', which challenges expectations and norms in the art world by creating a cultural hub of lively engagement for all of the community without losing sight of their ethos of bringing together traditional and emerging art and artists.



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