Amelia’s Magazine | Simon Burton: Nowhere Men

Category: Art

Simon Burton Nowhere Men
Simon Burton was born the same year as me and studied art at the University of Brighton (like me) before attending the Royal College of Art. Not that I know him… but I do like his new paintings for an exhibition that takes place at the Arch 402 Gallery in Hoxton. Nowhere Men focuses on the idea of Hermits, and the whole subject of social obsolescence.

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The fifteen paintings in Nowhere Men are inhabited by a series of hermit-like characters, both contemporary and historical. A modern-day angler, for example, stands nonchalant and bewildered. The violence involved in making his catch, is presented as an act of disengagement from his natural environment. His solitude depicted as an embodiment of social isolation.

Simon Burton angler
The idea of the hermit’s life – simplicity, solitude, a closeness to nature – lurks somewhere on the periphery of most people’s consciousness. We have a strong desire to escape reality and to open up other realms. I like the idea that a man fishing can haul out elements of existence that are not otherwise seen nor experienced and which can be easily thrown back in and lost againSimon Burton

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Six paintings in the new series concentrate on the famous 17th century hermit John Bigg of Dinton. Burton visited the Ashmolean, Oxford to research Bigg, who was reputed to have been Charles I executioner. It was the museum’s display of Bigg’s boot that impressed the artist most. Bigg lived in a cave and had repaired and patched his only pair of boots together for over thirty years. The result makes for a frightening display piece. Burton’s portraits of Bigg are made on canvases made by stitching together the remnants of old paintings as a direct reference to this.

Reforming and reclamation are recurrent themes in Burton’s work and his new paintings make us question how we connect to nature and to each other in today’s world. The atmosphere is uncertain; they drag us back into something ancient and pull us forward into the unknown.

The private view is on Thursday 8th September, from 6-9pm.