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Melbourne Art Fair 2024: Jonathan Dalton

Past exhibition
February 22 - 25, 2024 ART FAIR
  • Essay
  • Works
  • Dalton has stated that the actual application of paint is the uncomplicated part, and that indeed some paintings “just fall off the end of the brush”. It is the pre-thinking that is more complex, and the part he delights in.
  • Amber Creswell Bell 
    February, 2024

    A first reading of Jonathan Dalton’s show ‘The Silhouette of Opulence, the Shadow of a Labyrinth’ implores a deep appreciation for his exemplary technical skill - which is a wonder to view in person. The mind trips at his exacting eye, curious compositions, and easy comfort with his materials. A second reading reveals an insight into the artist’s curiosity about life, politics, literature, and perhaps a latent naval gaze.

     

    A self-described slow worker, this show is a gentle evolution of past shows (bowls of submerged objects)—and the way we associate with objects, and through those objects the world around us. It is not important to Dalton that audiences understand his meaning, but it is his hope that on some level the technical ability is sufficient enough to garner their attention —and then maybe question what else is intended.

     

    This show seeks to address different aspects of wealth, status, and beauty and is about interpreting people through the objects, myths and ideas that we hold dear and find interesting on both a broad and personal scale. The body of work, in classic Dalton style is also infused with wit and humour. As an Irishman, Dalton uses humour in a very ‘Irish’ way to deal with important or difficult subjects. The inclusion of fish is notably “because the fish don’t care.” In doing so, Dalton artfully removes objects from their natural habitat, further alienating the object from their context to elicit the absurdity of a notion.

     

    There has always been aspects of other artists work in Dalton’s oeuvre, because he finds it such a strong shared visual language. It is clear that Dalton enjoys taking this language, abstracting it and recontextualising it in his work to provoke a slightly tongue-in-cheek commentary. There are references to artists Matisse, Hokusai, Liechtenstein, Hockney, and Warhol; and authors Austen, Salinger, and Hemingway. Particular homage is made to artist David Hockney, who Dalton describes as his “spirit animal.” Hockney moved to California from small rural town in the UK, because he was left a small inheritance from his aunt. This is a similar tale to Dalton’s own narrative, bequeathed a small inheritance from a beloved aunt which enabled his move from Ireland to Spain, and the ignition of his art career.

    Read more

    Dalton also integrates veins of politics— Western Populism, violence in Northern Ireland, the Catholic Church and the Monarchy, as well as the physics of Schrödinger, and the philosophy of Solomon’s Seal. Notably Ireland circa 1977 —two Polaroid cameras with chess pieces, which denotes the year Dalton was born. At that time it was the violence in Northern Ireland that dominated Irish culture, and the impact that the Catholic church was having on the social contract. This perspicacious work, depicting two cameras—where one shines a flash on the problem, while the other—marked by the bishop and pawn (boy) does not. The camera device is the way we see, via the role of the artist.

     

    Dalton has stated that the actual application of paint is the uncomplicated part, and that indeed some paintings “just fall off the end of the brush”. It is the pre-thinking that is more complex, and the part he delights in. In The Silhouette of Opulence, the Shadow of a Labyrinth, as always, Dalton is not light on style, nor substance.

     
  • Works
    • Jonathan Dalton A little splash, 2023 Oil on linen 137 x 122cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      A little splash, 2023
      Oil on linen
      137 x 122cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton An old idea, no longer dangerous, in a fake gilded cage, 2023 Oil on birch board 60 x 55cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      An old idea, no longer dangerous, in a fake gilded cage, 2023
      Oil on birch board
      60 x 55cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton Copper teapot with bullet hole, 2023 Oil on linen 137 x 122cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      Copper teapot with bullet hole, 2023
      Oil on linen
      137 x 122cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton Ireland circa 1977, 2023 Oil on birch board 55 x 60cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      Ireland circa 1977, 2023
      Oil on birch board
      55 x 60cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton I’d rather drown, 2024 Oil on linen 137 x 122cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      I’d rather drown, 2024
      Oil on linen
      137 x 122cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton Long live the King, the Queen is dead, 2023 Oil on birch board 56 x 60cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      Long live the King, the Queen is dead, 2023
      Oil on birch board
      56 x 60cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton Love and kisses Andy Warhol, 2024 Oil on birch board 65 x 70cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      Love and kisses Andy Warhol, 2024
      Oil on birch board
      65 x 70cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton Panacea and persuasion, 2023 Oil on birch board 60 x 55cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      Panacea and persuasion, 2023
      Oil on birch board
      60 x 55cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton Schrödinger’s wave function, 2023 Oil on linen 137 x 122cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      Schrödinger’s wave function, 2023
      Oil on linen
      137 x 122cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton The absence of a figure by a pool, 2023 Oil on linen 137 x 122cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      The absence of a figure by a pool, 2023
      Oil on linen
      137 x 122cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton The feather crested Warhol, 2023 Oil on birch board 60 x 55cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      The feather crested Warhol, 2023
      Oil on birch board
      60 x 55cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton The old man band, 2023 Oil on linen 137 x 122cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      The old man band, 2023
      Oil on linen
      137 x 122cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton The tower of Blahbel, 2023 Oil on birch board 60 x 55cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      The tower of Blahbel, 2023
      Oil on birch board
      60 x 55cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton The water dance, 2024 Oil on linen 137 x 122cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      The water dance, 2024
      Oil on linen
      137 x 122cm
      Sold
    • Jonathan Dalton This too shall pass, 2023 Oil on linen 137 x 122cm
      Jonathan Dalton
      This too shall pass, 2023
      Oil on linen
      137 x 122cm
      Sold
  • Artist
    • Jonathan Dalton

      Jonathan Dalton

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