Vanishing Point - Making Waves by Matt Sheridan

Matt Sheridan is finally back in Los Angeles after his residency in Japan with a massive body of innovative new work under his belt. Sheridan has been lighting up Japan with his paintings in motion for the past few months and has received some well deserved critical acclaim for his latest 21st century multi media projects.

Click on the below link to see some footage from Sheridan's installments in Tokyo and around Japan. We are currently exhibiting Vanishing Point in the gallery, come on in and check out this artists amazing work in person!

http://vimeo.com/121738914

Vanishing Point (Make Waves) (2015)

Catherine Harrington, curatorial intern at MOT (Tokyo Museum of Contemporary Art) recently published this fantastic piece on the artist and his work:

Matt Sheridan: keeping the colours / taking out the words It's the last stop before Narita airport and I’m one of the few passengers remaining as the train pulls into Shimosa-manzaki station. Through the windows, an architectural phantasm is cast in shifting patterns of coloured light. Although by going to see the new projections by Los Angeles-based artist Matt Sheridan I’m expecting a light show (in the dark), the scale of the glowing spectacle in this vacated location is unexpectedly enticing. Contrasted against a blackened horizon of rice fields, the affects on other spectators is tangible; cars stop; drivers lose track of the road - so effectively do the flashing lights colonise their ‘attention’. Yet I’m also reminded how far this pastoral scene contrasts with one of the sites (or sights) that informs Sheridan’s projections; Times Square. Formerly a New Yorker, Sheridan recalls how he navigated Times Square at night, taking in the glare. He’d walk up close to the billboards and experience the text distorted and over-sized so that the words were no longer legible. “I wanted to keep the colours but take out the words” he reflects. A hint at a political gesture? The long history of public provocations in Times Square such as Jenny Holzer’s provocative “statements” or Ryoji Ikeda’s “test pattern” interferences at night may come to mind. Yet these works clearly operate as interventions. Sheridan, like his chimeric visuals, has more mercurial intent. For Sheridan may be as much influenced by fashion design and music as by Times Square, and seems to embrace buildings in the same way certain New York parties in the 1980s may have re-shaped Seventh Avenue. Sheridan is most interested in movement. For him, even oil paintings are already in his words, “moving” through colour and gesture, with the desire to expand “participants’ movements directly toward, across and into the paintings.” “Painting-in-motion” is how he describes his practice. His use of public space is not site-specific but site-reactive. “As long as the painting activates or transforms the room [or building] it’s successful,” he states. Beginning with ritually painted marks which are then digitised, he forms collages and sequences. These collages are animated and matched to a gridded architectural support “like making a garment” so that the final projections fit the target surface or building. For Sheridan – though mediated, these remain paintings. It is unsurprising then that he cites Wade Guyton as a key influence, whose “paintings” are typographics or found images that he prints through an ink-jet printer. His gesture of ‘pressing print’ has been compared to Pollock’s ‘drip’. In its delimitations, Guyton's outcomes have a clarity despite the uncertain results (paper jams, ink shortages, paper sizing). Sheridan's gesture of 'projection' however, seems more oblique, particularly in a public arena in which - in Foucault-Debordian terms - we are so aggressively commodified and controlled by flickering images. These are not new sites of contestation of course - for similar sites have been embattled with Holzer's counter-didactic “billboards”. But then, Sheridan does not intend to project- in-conflict or project-as-pastiche. Instead, VJ'd and metamorphosing, dressing buildings and walls, his projections appear and disappear in sync, silently accompanied by an expressive 'wooooow' or a muted Iron Man's 'whoooosh' . And in Narita, spectators 'making shapes' in the shadows of the projector, seem to concur. Viewing Sheridan’s projections in the context of Tokyo, a friend later compared them to Hanabi (“fireworks”) – an association Sheridan may not contest, but likely celebrate. Catherine Harrington, 2015  

Matt Sheridan has been busy making art in the land of the rising sun!

Artist Matt Sheridan has been in residence for the past couple of months in Japan creating some wonderful new works. Matt's paintings in motion have been exhibited all across the country thanks to his sponsor Paradise Air. The projected 4 dimensional works have activated not only the facades of buildings but also the internal spaces, transforming the static architecture into  living, breathing monuments. Matt has engaged not only contemporary buildings, but also historical monuments including the last shogun's residence in Kyoto. From loud, engulfing works to small subtle installations, Matt has been busy lighting up Japan and we can't wait to see the new work that will arise from his travels when he returns to LA later this month. [caption id="attachment_14496" align="aligncenter" width="700"]Vanishing Point by Matt Sheridan Vanishing Point by Matt Sheridan[/caption]

NEW PRINTS - Series by Matt Sheridan

Together with CHASING TAIL we have released a new series of prints by the sensational Matt Sheridan. In the Gallery we are featuring CHASING TAIL - one of Matt's moving artworks. The piece is an animated composite of physical & digital painting that revolutionizes the traditional medium by making it four dimensional. A painting of the 21st Century!

Here is a little insight into Matt Sheridan's innovative process and the story behind the latest series of prints.

Each of the paper paintings that we have released in print was created to generate sequentialized marks to be scanned and composited into video paintings-in-motion. Together they create a moving painting, and as stand alone pieces they are sensational - even better is a cluster!

[caption id="attachment_13095" align="alignleft" width="233"]Modular Painting VIII, 2013. Limited Edition Print by Matt Sheridan Modular Painting VIII, 2013. Limited Edition Print by Matt Sheridan[/caption] [caption id="attachment_13079" align="alignleft" width="227"]Modular Painting V, 2013. Limited Edition Print by Matt Sheridan Modular Painting V, 2013. Limited Edition Print by Matt Sheridan[/caption] [caption id="attachment_13075" align="alignleft" width="221"]Modular Painting II, 2013. Limited Edition Print by Matt Sheridan Modular Painting II, 2013. Limited Edition Print by Matt Sheridan[/caption]

Still Systemic Sequence 003 are acrylic on gessoed paper (12 sheets/ set, each mounted to black Sintra floats separated 6" horizontally and 3" vertically), set = 42" x 54" (107 x 137 cm) / each sheet = 9" x 12" (23 x 30.5 cm), 2012. Each print has been released in an edition of 200.

http://www.msheridanstudio.com/

Matt Sheridan is currently in residence in Japan and participating in Paradise Air.

What's Happening @ TWFA in December

VIEW HOTEL PROJECTION TWFINEART has collaborated with artist Elise Lee and VIEW HOTEL to bring Brisbane into the cultural limelight.  The state of the art project will transform the exterior of the Brisbane Riverview Hotel, facing Kingsford Smith Drive, for the nights of Friday 5th December and Saturday 6th December 2014, into a beacon of dynamic light, illuminating the facade with a moving artwork that would capture the attention of any person driving or walking by the hotel.  Lee’s work is a derivative of Pop Art and draws inspiration from artists like Takashi Murakami to create bright, oscillating, stylized shapes that dance across surfaces, emerging and disappearing in explosions of color and form. ELISE-PROMO
CHASING TAIL: The TWFINEART Gallery will feature the moving paintings of US artist Matt Sheridan in an exhibition titled CHASING TAIL. Sheridan's artwork will be projected through the gallery and complimented by a range of limited edition prints and stills from the animation. CHASING-TAIL-GENERAL-INVITE