James Robert Ford

James R Ford is a contemporary British conceptual artist.

Sum of Choices, James R Ford, 2016, Dye sublimated satin, 120 x 120 cm
James R Ford
Born6 May 1980 (1980-05-06)
NationalityBritish
EducationNottingham Trent University, Goldsmiths
Known forConceptual art, Neo-conceptual art, installation art
Notable work
House Gymnastics, General Carbuncle

Work

Ford's work contemplates human needs and wants, the perils of choice, and the value of things and nothings in art and life. The search for, and generation of, meaning is also important to his practice, along with the confusion this can lead to. His focus is on conceptual reductivism, through looped short films, found object assemblage, poignant text statements or minimalist mark making.

"The playfulness of Ford’s work allows him to approach complex philosophical theories and present the audience with an entry point from which to explore existential concerns. There is an urgency in his work yet the folly with which he articulates these urgencies is refreshing. As we try to navigate a way through the milieu of our contemporary condition we feel that Ford, through his practice, might be able to suggest to us a different way of seeing and/or being" (Rudi Christian Ferreira, Curator, 2017)

Ford studied at Nottingham Trent University and Goldsmiths, University of London and currently lives and works in Wellington, New Zealand. Ford has exhibited widely throughout the UK, New Zealand and internationally, and in 2013 was winner of the inaugural Tui McLauchlan Emerging Artist's Award from the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts. In 2012 Ford curated a national touring exhibition of contemporary male artists based in NZ, entitled Never Mind the Pollocks, featuring creatives including Bill Culbert.

gollark: Versus one 11 hours ago for Dendrite.
gollark: Yet it has had no commits since December.
gollark: Doesn't look like it.
gollark: Hmm. This is apparently a fork of Dendrite, but presumably updated even less.
gollark: The others can't do federation and are thus not really "Matrix".

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.