JOHN SPINKS: REMAINS TO BE SEEN

March 9 – September 23, 2018

John Spinks
Heart of Darkness, 2009
Acrylic and paper collage on canvas
14 x 14 inches

John Spinks
777, 1995
Mixed media on canvas
36 x 36 inches

John Spinks
Migration, 1998
Mixed media on canvas
36 x 36 inches

John Spinks
Asian Fusion, 2015
collage and acrylic on a panel
12 x 12 in.
 

John Spinks
Condensed Books, 1992
collage on panel
40 x 40 in.
 

John Spinks
A Wearying For You, 2003
collage and acrylic medium on canvas
22 x 17 inches

John Spinks
Continuation of Peace River, 2000
mixed media on canvas
36x 36 in.

John Spinks
Point of View, 2007
Acrylic and paper collage on canvas
30 x 30 inches

John Spinks
More of a Placid Style, 2006
Mixed media on canvas
24 x 24 inches

John Spinks
I Was Myself in That Area, 2007
Acrylic and collage on canvas
24 x 24 in.

John Spinks
Broth on a low gas, 2007
Acrylic and collage on canvas
24 x 24 in.

John Spinks
Someone to give him a few hours, 2010
Mixed media on paper
24 x 24 inches

John Spinks
Culebra, 2013
Acrylic and collage on canvas
19 x 27 in.

John Spinks
Tactical Drawing, 1993
mixed media on canvas
46 x 42 in.

John Spinks

Face a New Day, 2017
Acrylic and collage on canvas
36x 24 in.

John Spinks
Full of Promise, 2011
Acrylic and collage on panel
24 x 30 in.

 John Spinks
Mexico, 2017
Acrylic and collage on canvas
22.5 x 30 in.

John Spinks
Sirens, 2017
Mixed media on canvas
22.5 x 30 inches

John Spinks
Dialogue between the Wind and the Sea, 2017
Acrylic and paper collage on canvas
22.5 x 30 inches

John Spinks
The Sea of Cole Porter, 2017
Acrylic and collage on canvas
22.5 x 30 in.

Press Release

TILLOU FINE ART will present REMAINS TO BE SEEN, a comprehensive solo presentation of painting, collages, and works on paper by Brooklyn-based artist JOHN SPINKS, opening October 25th 2017.  In this exhibition, John Spinks explores the mutable relationship between what we see and what we know. Joining musical notes, letters, and maps with geometric forms, he mines both personal and world history.  Many of the collages incorporate letters sent to the artist from his father. Written on onion skin paper, the letters appear like delicate memories floating to the surface, full of everyday musings and news.  Sometimes the text appears in small towers of words, creating fragile monuments to the vernacular.

Spinks often moves maps of countries around like chess pieces. In the work Asian Fusion, he draws Asia and the United States close, overlapping the two continents, creating new ports of entry and exit through this juxtaposition. He is interested in making the familiar unfamiliar; words, musical notes, and maps lose their original purpose in his collages and are put to work constructing visual mysteries.

Looking for “density and pattern” rather than sound, the artist was first attracted to musical notes for their shapes. In La Mer, Spinks was inspired by a Debussy score of the same name.  The sheet music came first, but when he listened to Debussy’s “La Mer” he realized the sounds the composer created “are all about deep space”.  There are several works that incorporate musical notes and the sea that Spinks describes this way, “You see the clouds, you see the horizon line, and you see the sea behaving accordingly- it’s harmonic”.  Spinks’ skill at using one thing, like a musical note, for its physical form rather than the sound it represents, erases any artificial boundaries between the heard and the seen.

Debussy’s music reminds Spinks of “how a seagull flies sideways..”. This appreciation of the skewed extends to his materials; he prefers them to be weathered and imperfect. The artist’s attraction to asymmetry leads to edges that don’t meet and uneven geometric gestures. Works like Broth on Low Gas and Epistle, that include his father’s letters on delicate onion paper, have an anthropomorphic quality. The wavering grid in one and uneven rectangular towers in the other seem alive and full of movement.

Spink’s attraction to the work and process of Henri Michaux illustrates his own appreciation of altered or higher states of consciousness. The dream-like qualities in these collages appear in different forms. The works can have a soft, tender dreaminess or a graphic mystery; sometimes they combine both.  The letters, maps, and musical scores in REMAINS TO BE SEEN seems to guide the artist, and his allegiance to them gives the work its power.  They merge in forms that celebrate the imperfect and come, in the artist’s words, “straight off the nervous system”.  

Mimi Thompson