Christian Ward
Foothills
6 March – 19 April 2008
Max Wigram Gallery, 99 New Bond Street, London

Private View: Wednesday, 5 March, 6:30 – 8:30pm

Max Wigram Gallery is pleased to present its third solo show of new work by Christian Ward. Ward’s paintings occupy a space between eastern and western landscape genres, borrowing from both traditions to create an abstract sense of place.

Ward’s images, which have evolved from his own experiences of various locations, as well as from films and books, appear both familiar and strange. Ranging from Alpine scenery to the American Southwest to mountainous regions of the Far East, it is Ward’s treatment – a disregard for traditional chiaroscuro and perspective, favouring what he refers to as a ’slipping and sliding’ - which makes the images appear ambiguous. In referencing tenth Century Chinese scroll painting and murals painted on the inner walls of Japanese Zen temples, the work also indirectly recalls pre-renaissance representation where distortions often reveal the emotional importance attached to certain motifs. While ancient Chinese painting sought to dissolve materiality by rendering its subjects – mountains, houses, travellers, trees, waterfalls etc – as apparitions, wholly constructed by the imagination, western painting with its chiaroscuro and, subsequent use of lenses, sought to depict an experience of materiality.

Foothills, a sprawling shimmering mountainscape with patches of electric purple and green, is spread over three panels. Although the landscape recalls Sung Dynasty landscape painting, it features a small, remote community of dilapidated houses at the foot of a mountain range. This style of architecture is borrowed from the American heartland, specifically from a book tracking the steps of various 19th century outlaws who took refuge in the isolated melancholic landscapes of Utah and Colorado.

Cat of the Mountains, a hauntingly atmospheric landscape, features mountains shrouded in heavy mist dotted with temple-like structures. The vertical format of this large-scale triptych recalls Japanese screen painting, although more than any other work in the show, the composition resembles that of traditional Chinese landscape painting. Not without the tension characteristic in Ward’s work, the buildings are rendered in chiaroscuro, while the mountains which surround them are not, creating a clash of mysticism and realism – east meets west – unified by haunting mists which hover like steam that follows from such a collision of opposites.

Christian Ward (b. 1977, Noda, JP) lives and works in London. This year Ward will participate in INSIDEOUT at Gallery Moriarty, Madrid (Spain) and Imaginary Realities at Max Wigram Gallery, London. Last year Ward had a solo show at Patricia Low Contemporary, Gstaad (Switzerland). In 2005 he exhibited in Ideal Worlds at the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt a/M (Germany) and Faltering Flames at Graves Gallery, Sheffield (UK).

For further information, please contact the gallery at press@maxwigram.com