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A PORTRAIT OF THE ORDINARY
2021

This body of work reflects on what it means to be 'ordinary' in a hypermediated, emotionally saturated world shaped by technology, identity, and constant distraction. Through paintings and video installations, it questions how curated selves, fragmented attention, and digital overexposure shape our sense of reality and connection in ways that often go unnoticed.

21st Century Schiziod Man 1.jpg
face.jpg
21st Century Schiziod Man 2.jpg

21st Century schizoid, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 300 cm (59.06 x 118.11 inches)

Painted as an homage to Barry Godber’s iconic 1969 cover for King Crimson’s debut album In The Court of the Crimson King, this work reflects on the enduring emotional intensity and rawness embedded in visual culture. Godber's only known painting, created in a moment of unfiltered expression, captures a timeless scream of vulnerability, confusion, and human fragility.

Revisiting this gesture within the framework of The Ordinary, I explore what it means to be emotionally naked in an era dominated by curated digital selves and stylized detachment. The distorted face becomes a mirror, not of madness, but of the overstimulated and overexposed contemporary self. In that sense, this work is not merely a visual echo of Godber’s original, but an invitation to reconsider how the ordinary face, the unspectacular human reaction, becomes extraordinary in its honesty.

This exhibition examines some of the prevailing ways in which ordinariness circulates in the present day. By ordinary, we simply mean something ‘normal’ or ‘common’, something lacking any atypical or unusual features; something that is not necessarily special nor different. Here, we trace some of the normative habits and practices put to work at the intersection of technology, identity and emotion – three key areas where our portrait is situated.

 

It is now ordinary for one to live out multiple and overlapping lives through manifold social networks; to selectively upload curated, manicured and upgraded versions of oneself; to become absorbed in, and identify with, the many myriads of Truths available, substantiated or otherwise.

New media is fast. Really fast.

 

And we’re busy, very busy.

 

Continuous streams of condensed and over-determined packets of meaning-making neatly packaged in high intensity and short durational forms constantly hit us in fun and frenzied ways. Buy now / Like and share / Subscribe. Moreover, the technology that sustains these ubiquitous affective capacities is readily available, easily accessible, and offers a seemingly infinite array of opportunities for enjoyment.

 

It’s exciting, emotional stuff. And we’re all hooked.

 

So, within this frame, what might it mean to be ‘ordinary’ in contemporary life?

 

Take, for instance, a highly mediated climate where unsubstantiated claims can rapidly and uncritically gain currency; that we may be ready to love and hate without knowing why – how might this impede on our collective well-being?

 

Or consider the speed in which this moves. Consider how overly occupied we are. Consider our sleep deprivation – techno-emotive-identification is exhausting and fatiguing stuff. How much does this impact our awareness? Or should we say, how far will our lack of awareness continue to slip and slide? 

There is much in the way of malaise and disillusionment that has emerged with the formation of this new status quo. Block / Delete / Report. But while the ease with which certain ways of being in the world are often put to work in precarious ways, possibilities for collective well-being are simultaneously made available. Indeed, while there is trouble, there is also optimism.

 

This series of paintings and video installations expresses a critical attitude towards the ordinary without awareness. Each painting stands as a complete work in itself while simultaneously forming part of a larger portrait. From the formation of life, to its journey of becoming, to its range of results and possibilities, this opus leaves room for viewers to navigate and interpret through their own perspectives.

 

The task of the artist is not to provide answers, but to ask the right questions.

Voyage.jpg

New life...

The uterus.jpg

First Breath...

Beginning, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, shellac, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)
 

Voyage, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, shellac, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

 

Gate passSMALL.jpg

Transition...

LOOK_edited.jpg

First look...

Gate pass, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, shellac, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

 

Look, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, shellac, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

 

Dawn of industry - technologySMALL.jpg

Revolution...

SRCE2.jpg

Almost human emotions ...

Dawn of Industry & Technology, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, shellac, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

 

Out of the box, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

TechHead.jpg

Victory...

Machine Head, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, shellac, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
100 x 150 cm (39.4 x 59.06 inches)

 

A Portartae of ordenery.jpg

My dear...

A portrait of the ordinary, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, shellac, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
100 x 150 cm (39.4 x 59.06 inches)

 

Media 1.jpg

Box for idiots...

Media 2.jpg

Color box for idiots...

Media I, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

Media II, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

 

Predajnik_edited.jpg

Expansion...

Warrior.jpg

True believer...

Repeater, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

 

Warrior, 2021
Mixed media: acrylic, glue, and natural gravel on canvas
150 x 100 cm (59.06 x 39.4 inches)

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