4.6 • 1.1K Ratings
🗓️ 10 March 2023
⏱️ 66 minutes
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We meet painter KATY MORAN to discuss More Me, the artist's first presentation in Australia to date, showcasing her signature style of painting that defies and dispels traditional genres of landscape, portraiture or still life, instead, existing as free, gestural explorations of colour and line.
Moran’s practice hovers in a productive space between figuration and abstraction. She paints over canvases found in flea markets and charity shops, blurring the found images beneath her layers of paint, evoking a deliberate sense of nostalgia and longing, as if unravelling a distant memory.
Katy Moran’s paintings reflect a responsive working process: shifting or rotating the canvas while painting, reworking textures, and reconsidering the shapes and figures that emerge. With this approach to painting along with the inclusion of collage, often partially obscured, her work conveys a deliberate tension between materiality and subject. Moran creates a dynamic push and pull between the addition and the removal of paint; some works exhibit thick application of paint, while in others the painterly gesture is removed with rags dipped in varnish or even by sanding. Via the oscillation between representation and abstraction, composition and narrative, texture and space, Moran engages thought and sense simultaneously.
Follow @KatyMoran123 on Instagram and visit her gallery Modern Art: https://modernart.net/artists/katy-moran
Katy Moran's new exhibition More Me is now open and runs until 1st April at Station, Melbourne, Australia.
Visit https://stationgallery.com
Katy Moran lives and works in Hertfordshire. She was born in Manchester in 1975 and completed an MA Fine Art in painting at the Royal College of Art, London in 2005. Moran’s work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at Parasol Unit for Contemporary Art, London (2015); the Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin (2013); Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus (2010); Tate St. Ives (2009); and Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, UK (2008). Her work has been featured in group exhibitions at Tate St. Ives (2018); Aspen Art Museum (2015); Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2013); SFMOMA (2012); and Tate Britain, London (2008). Her work is included in important public and private collections including Arts Council Collection, London; David Roberts Art Foundation; Government Art Collection, London; The Rachofsky Collection, Dallas; Royal College of Art, London; Tate; SFMOMA; and Walker Art Center; Yale Center for British Art, New Haven; and Zabludowicz Collection.
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| 0:00.0 | Good afternoon, good morning, Good evening. Wherever you are in the world, I am Russell Tovey. |
| 0:09.7 | And I'm Robert Diamond. And this is Talkart. Welcome to Talkart. How are you today, Robert? |
| 0:16.1 | Today, Russell, I am feeling fortunate and I've been thinking a lot about good fortune and also |
| 0:23.6 | chance. And today's guest work has made me reminisce about chance in my own life where, |
| 0:30.2 | you know, I think a lot of us study, especially for artists, actually, they study in quite |
| 0:35.2 | rigorous, intense, academic way for many, many, many years. It's actually a bit like if you're a |
| 0:41.1 | doctor or something. I think people spend like, I don't know, seven years or an architect or |
| 0:46.0 | all these different professions where you have to really dedicate a long, long, long period of time |
| 0:50.8 | to the end goal, which is becoming an artist, you know, as a professional thing or maybe even just |
| 0:56.5 | as a hobby, but it's still something that a lot of people dedicate their time to. And I was |
| 1:00.1 | thinking about this meeting between the kind of academic rigor versus chance and what some people |
| 1:07.1 | would say good fortune or even luck, perhaps. And even ourselves, like with Talkart, it was kind of |
| 1:11.9 | an accident. Like, we've had a lot of good luck along the way, but at the same time, it was born out |
| 1:17.2 | of both of our passion and dedication to learning and teaching ourselves about our history in all |
| 1:22.2 | different ways and also collecting art and stuff like that. And I love today's guest work. And I'm |
| 1:27.6 | really happy because I saw their show at the Paris Union in 2015, which was an overview of 10 |
| 1:34.0 | years of their painting, which at the time was was such an impressive body of work. But now almost |
| 1:40.0 | 10 years later, I mean, it's probably eight years later, but it's really interesting to sort of catch |
| 1:44.9 | up with them and see what's happened, you know, through the pandemic, they've moved out of London and |
| 1:50.0 | moved to Hertfordshire. And I'm really fascinated to talk about the meeting points between figurative |
| 1:55.7 | painting and abstract painting and this idea of kind of landscape, perhaps, but then an abstracted |
| 2:01.1 | version of it or, you know, like a cityscape, but an abstract sort of version of it, because I feel like |
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