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Ian
Scott's otherworldly paintings, frequently bizarre yet always based
in a closely focused, detailed reality, attain their strange convictions
only because of their visionary quantities. Scott's rich imagination
envisages a world where literally anything can happen. And often does.
Yet, as he is quick to point out, many of his unusual scenarios are
based on real life: glimpses of street happenings from New York to
Wick. The good, the bad. rich and poor, ugly, divine, the loved and
the unlovable, confront each other, negotiate. Give or take. Winner
takes all. Some transactions are financial, others national, physical
or sexual. Power is at the root of it all. A Scottish Parliament is
just as precarious as a mixed race marriage or a celebrity's fame.
While based in Scotland and Germany, Scott drew on colourful local
characters from Glasgow, Edinburgh, Wick and Munich. An obsession
with deep-sea divers and their helmets led to a series with faces
hidden by a variety of masks, some literal, some psychological, metamorphical
or emotional. Once in New York his horizons expanded to encompass
stars like David Bowie, Matthew Marks, Damian Loeb, Joe Coleman and
Charlie Finch plus a wide range of characters from Chinatown, from
the Bronx, from the Chelsea art works and from rock music. Technically,
Scott has a virtuoso touch, his eagle eye retaining immense detail
of each character's looks, garb, skin texture - each pore delineated;
each scrawny tree or stony crag captured in graphic detail and affectionate
exactitude. (An extract from "Northlands Festival 2001"
by Clare Henry) |
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