JL:
Can you please tell me when you first discovered painting and
what were your first paintings like?
JK: I started
drawing and painting a lot at the age of six. As I grew up I
painted a lot from my imagination. I took A level art and felt a
bit disillusioned and decided to go to university. I later
regretted this and kept on life drawing. I went into journalism
and started to have a very busy, successful career on a national
newspaper, but about 15 years ago I started painting seriously.
I went to a teacher in Chelsea on Sundays. He was a crabby old
Scotsman, hated his pupils, didn't welcome anyone in, but he had
the knowledge I wanted. At that time it was all life painting
and still life. I have tried to let ideas come in to my work,
and to focus on themes that interest me. "Look into your heart
and paint," to misquote Shaw.
JL: In your painting
"The Death of Sandy", There is something very dream-like and
allegorical about this particular piece. You have used some
beautiful colours, like Prussian blues against the old man's
silver hair and flesh tones. Also the colours in the calico
looking cat resemble camouflage and the ox blood red canoe
really stands out in contrast with the flesh and ocean sky at
night.
What inspired
this painting and is this made with oil?
JK: It is oil on
board. I found the cat's sudden death on the road hard to
cope with, esp as I had found the cat in the Congo, brought
him back to the UK and he'd been in quarantine for six
months. He had a few months with me then he was killed here,
on the road. He had lost one eye in Africa and couldn't see
very well.
- I found
the Greek myth about the dead crossing over the river
Styx, rowed over by Charon, very comforting. There is no
particular misery attached to it, the dead have their
own kingdom. I liked that idea at the time.
- If we could
undo psychosis 2
JL: "Anxiety" -
When you set out to make a painting like this, is there a kind
of mind set, emotion, spirit, energy, that you wish to capture
from the sitter and do you work mostly from photos?
JK: No, I do a
lot of self portraits - this was a self portrait! My head was on
fire with anxiety.
.
-
- Happy Family
JL: I see something
similar in the way you painted "Amaryllis " and "If we could
un-do psychosis one" The wilting plant etc. This man looks
really normal but wilting inside. Brings to mind Erik Fromm's
assessment of malignant narcissism and his "Syndrome of Decay".
JK;
Amaryllis was about fears of approaching the menopause and being
past fertility.
- Amaryllis
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JL: This next
painting has caused much controversy in the UK . Looking at it,
and hypothetically not knowing who the woman is with the grey
hair and teddy bear and child on her lap. She looks like what a
lot of middle aged English women look like. Apathetic, anxious,
withdrawn, lonely etc.
When you find out
that this is a portrait of a serial killer, is when it
boomerangs and it takes on sinister connotations in the viewers
mind. Why do you believe that this one in particular caused so
much controversy and problems in the minds of certain viewers?
JK: That is
interesting that you mention how Myra looks, without knowing
her. She went to prison aged 23, when I was ten. I was very
scared by the whole thing, but over the years I came to
sympathise with her. She should have been released but attention
in the tabloid press made it impossible.
- I took a
photo from Weekend Magazine, or a normal English family,
took out the Dad and substituted Myra, to see how she would
look if she was allowed to be part of a normal family
situation again. I could see that it wouldn't work, it
jarred, but that was not her fault.
- Anxiety
JL: The old
woman with the silver hair in "happy family" looks like the
Queen of England and not happy at all. The man next to her
in the Hawaiian shirt looks like he's semi faking the smile.
The woman to his right looks almost frightened and the boy
looks like he has been forced to sit and does not want to be
there. Can you please tell me about this painting?
JK: You are right
about all those things. This was a photo of my brother, his then
wife and son, with my mother replaced by the Queen. I was making
a contrast between the perfect family life represented by the
Queen, and our own, which was terrible at the time.
- If we could undo
psychosis 1
JL: What
inspired "If we could undo psychosis 1" ?
JK: I
wish that certain aspects of history, the Holocaust for instance
could just be undone. If we could retrospectively give Hitler
therapy for instance, in the same way I wish that evil people could
be changed, just by taking a pill or something.
www.stuckism.com
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