Simon Chinnery
Following a three year stint living in a Buddhist community I took up Ballet after seeing a film about the famous, troubled Russian dancer, Nijinsky. Music, drama and dance all in one; that did it for me. I moved from Brighton to London, got a scholarship to the Urdang Academy in Covent Garden and immersed myself in all things artistic and hedonistic. From Monk to Punk in the twinkle of club lights. After training and touring for a bit with London City Ballet the natural next step in my life was….to work in the City.
Painting became part of my life again following a personal crisis that turned my world upside down. It was a long dark soul of the night thing. Think Gerald Scarf has a long lunch with Ralph Steadman and you get some way down that hole. I used inks and acrylic and lots of rage and I never showed anyone my monsters.
Over the last twenty years or so I have come back again and again to the canvas, slowly finding my pace with pigments and textures. I mainly paint abstracts in mixed media including acrylic, plant powders and oils. My work is full of energy and movement with my inspiration coming from natural landscapes, ‘colourscapes’ and the amazing worlds you can see if you look closely at things. I have a fascination with natural images of light, colour, abstract shapes and the cycle of growth and decay.
I use images from walks, gardens, city environments, often snapped on impulse as idea pigments that are then expressed on canvas in mixed media to try and capture these organic movements through the cycle of seasons. I’ve been told that there is a bit of dream-like messiness in my work as I try to articulate feelings into organic energy.
View a selection of Simon’s works below ↓
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Artist Statement
I paint abstracts in mixed media including acrylic, plant powders and oils. My work is full of energy and movement with my inspiration coming from natural landscapes and the amazing worlds you can see if you look closely at things.
I have a fascination with natural images of light, colour, abstract shapes, and the cycle of growth, decay and seasons. I’ve been told that there is a bit of dream-like messiness in my work as I try to articulate feelings into organic energy.
I feel that my paintings say something about the joy of painting as an expressive act and for that very reason alone cause us to think not only about the darkness we carry with us, but also the colour, the brightness and the light, and how the contrast of these make us human.