One (Outstanding) Person Show
Tom Rees: 101 Paintings
His existentialist scenes, portraits and still lives expose a murky underside to the real. A table reveals molten cracks beneath an otherwise innocuous vase. A sea-blue moon, fluorescent red sun, a disembodied eye and mouth – these details loom ominously over subjects wandering lost in desolate landscapes rendered in dour pallets. Elsewhere threat is more explicit: a drowning body, a Peeping Tom, a wry devil reiterated across several works, a pointless fist fight. Knowingly, Rees plays his characters puckishly as caricature. The result is a kind of psychosexual or moral fable, with the moralising part cauterised. Other works resemble disarticulated punchlines to crude jokes. And yet an implicit satire emerges across this – of the police state, white nationalism, toxic pornographic fantasy and consumer capitalism’s kitsch algorithms.
Like other magpie dwellers of NYC before him, David Wojnarowicz or Philip Guston, this is an artist who creates their own culture out of a boyish omnivorousness. Drawing from noir, art brut and elements of muralism, Rees’s alternative world distorts any boundary between the symbolic and the real. This is work that wants to provoke you, to make you laugh, but not to labour over intricacy. And yet, seeing such a handsome spread of work such as this, I am struck by the ambience, the suggestive absences, daring brushwork, the unheimlich gestures of its natural world, that lies beneath the more commanding images. This is work, indeed, a world, worth being kept inside for.
Sam Buchan-Watts
July 2020