Tom Gidley (b. 1968)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… Read more
Tom Gidley (b. 1968)

Edge Array

Details
Tom Gidley (b. 1968)
Edge Array
signed and dated 'T. Gidley 2012' (on the overlap)
oil on linen
27 5/8 x 19 ¾in. (70.1 x 50.2cm.)
Painted in 2012
Provenance
Paradise Row, London.
Acquired from the above in 2012.
Exhibited
London, Paradise Row, From The Corner Of Your Eye To The Corner Of The Room And Back Again, 2012.
London, Saatchi Gallery, New Order II: British Art Today, 2013 (illustrated in colour, unpaged).
Special Notice
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent. VAT rate of 20% is payable on hammer price and buyer's premium

Lot Essay

Existential angst takes compelling form in Tom Gidley’s Edge Array. A woman is painted in profile, with a brightly coloured geometric jacket conveyed in vivid detail; yet her skin is grey, merging hazily into a monochrome background. Her face disintegrates in a miasma of brushstrokes, and the entire canvas is riven with drips that reveal a raw yellow ground beneath, as if dissolving an illusory veil of reality. Only the jacket persists in this blurry Richteresque gloom, as if standing for a constructed mosaic of self-image. The title Edge Array refers to a data type used in programming algorithms to associate information with the edge of a graph: Gidley’s painting seems to conceive of a person as informational flux, a field of shifting coordinates in continual formation. ‘I’m interested in the mental connections we make that make up the shape of who we think we are,’ he says, ‘and how we see ourselves in relation to others. Who am I, what part of me is the fundamental essence of “me” – or am I simply an idea. Those are the questions that keep coming back. The work may take different physical forms, but that’s partly the point. It takes very little to shift for our concepts of self to be completely fragmented.’

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