Charlie Oscar Patterson

Charlie Oscar Patterson simultaneously produces multiple bodies of work that embrace the history of modernist painting; they are a continuation and combination of minimalism and abstraction that merge sculpture with painting. 

 

Downplaying the decorative qualities of the canvas while at the same time playing on its physicality, Patterson leads us on a journey to discover new perceptions of space and light.

 

While colour is one of Patterson's foremost visual markers, each artwork plays a "sound" through rhythmic intervention, and the shifting light captures their movement through time. In Patterson's work, light becomes a conduit, a vehicle for transporting colour from the object's smooth surface to our discerning eye. His deep fascination with colour is, first and foremost, an exploration of light since light is colour. Building up many layers of dense oil paint, Patterson cleverly focuses on using a single colour tone to emphasise the work's surface, highlights, and shadow - the canvas is brought to life as you move around the artwork and the light changes. This focused combination of colour and shape speaks to his concern with emphasising the physical presence of the artwork itself, rather than an expression of the artist's voice - his monochrome pieces are a great example of this.

 

In Patterson's work, light completes the artwork and simultaneously transforms it. One can better understand Patterson's practice by perceiving light more like sound. In the same way, you make an instrument to produce a specific sound, Patterson's artworks are instruments that play the light. Describing his artistic process, Patterson reflects that, "building the frame is like writing the score and painting is like playing for the first time." Like the keys of a piano, the three-dimensional extensions of the canvas act as tools for Patterson to play with light, offering infinite possibilities and variations of shadow and tonality. Composing his artworks like a musical score, Patterson's architectures become instruments that can be heard playing solid rhythms of colour to the beat of light and shadow. Patterson's work is experiential. Through his gesture, the work becomes an object, an installation - it acquires a certain presence that involves the spectator as they share the same space.