Jack McGarrity trained at the Glasgow School of Art, close to where he grew up in the West of Scotland, before moving to London to study at the Royal Drawing School. In 2018 he attended a two month residency at the Museo del Prado in Madrid having been awarded the Richard Ford Award and a year later spent three months in Florence for the John Kinross Award.
Equally concerned with both quotidian mundanity and the heightened reality of film and comic books, McGarrity creates new narratives that explore notions of the absurd, stillness and alienation in the modern world. Embodying a wry sense of humour, McGarrity’s collaged enactments present scenarios that are, at times, idiosyncratic and mordant whilst retaining an essential sentimentality.
McGarrity joined the Messums Emerging Talents Programme with an exhibition at our Wiltshire Gallery in July 2021. Since 2016 we have supported an annual emerging talent programme that champions artists at the beginning of their career. The programme has seen four years of burgeoning talent grow into established creative strength with Messums and elsewhere.
Q. What first inspired your practice?
I first became interested in drawing from looking at cartoons and comic strips when I was younger, and I think this influence is still present in my current work. I am still interested in sequences and depicting multiple images on the one surface to imply narrative.
Q. What has been your background / training and how influential has that subsequently been?
I completed my BA in Painting and Printmaking at Glasgow School of Art. Whilst studying at Glasgow I was really interested in making big figurative oil paintings. This changed a lot when I studied at The Royal Drawing School. At the Drawing School I became more interested in making smaller works on paper with a focus on collages. Now I am trying to combine these two aspects of my practice by returning to making larger scale works whilst trying to retain aspects of my smaller works on paper.
Q. Tell me more about your subject matter and the inspiration for your work?
During the lockdown I became really interested in the work of Lois Dodd and I think because of that, at the moment I am mainly interested in depicting small everyday moments and how these could somehow be given more status or make quotidian objects more monumental.
Q. Who or what has been your greatest influence as an artist? Which artists most inspire you?
When I was at Glasgow I got the opportunity to study at the Prado for two months. During this time, I mostly made drawings from Goya’s work, and I still think about his use of composition and application of paint a lot today when I work. Guston and Picasso are also major inspirations as well as contemporary artists such Mamma Anderson, Jokum Nordström and Jennifer Packer.
Q. Can you tell me about your mark-making process?
I usually start with an extremely bright ground which I then work on with gradually darker tones. I always like to try and keep some areas of the ground piercing through. This was something that I saw in Goya’s work, and I think it helps unify the image whilst also providing some areas with some unusual colour combinations. Once I have a basic image I am relatively happy with I will sometimes work over it using other materials to enrich the surface quality of a work or try and
create some jarring areas using collage.
Q. What is the most challenging element of your practice?
I think trying to restrain the amount of colours I’m using in the early stages of a painting I feel l sometimes make work that can be too much and not work as a cohesive whole.
Q. How do the processes of drawing and painting relate to each other in your work?
I usually start with an extremely bright ground which I then work on with gradually darker tones. I always like to try and keep some areas of the ground piercing through. This was something that I saw in Goya’s work, and I think it helps unify the image whilst also providing some areas with some unusual colour combinations. Once I have a basic image I am relatively happy with I will sometimes work over it using other materials to enrich the surface quality of a work or try and
create some jarring areas using collage.
I think drawing and painting are becoming more and more intertwined in my work. I see the smaller gouache works very much as drawings but formally and stylistically they aren’t very different from the larger works on canvas. I have also started using oil bars a lot which I feel has further burred the line between the two disciplines.
Q. What for you are the desired essential qualities of image-making?
I think an image, or a painting specifically, has to be rewarding over time and not give everything away all at once. I think this has to apply to both how a painting is made but also its meaning or narrative – if it has one. I also enjoy being able to see the process of how an image has been constructed. When I erase things in my work I try to leave some trace of it behind, to give some sort of palimpsest idea to create a sense of history within the image.
Q. How do you see your work relating to tradition and contemporary art practice?
From doing residencies at the Prado and in Florence I am extremely interested in the history of painting, and I think this permeates a lot of my work, whether it be through references or even aspects of composition or colour. In London just now there seems to be a real renewed interest in painting and I hope my work can be part of this
Q. What are the latest developments in your work?
Recently I have become interested in how I could create an image using very little tonal difference and almost monochromatic colour palette. I have been looking at Rothko’s work a lot and I think this has inspired this direction for the work.
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