Wednesday 10 June 2015

Girls

Seasonal Girl.
Ink on Paper
40 x 30 cm
2015


birdies

Wilsons Frigate Gull
Ink and watercolour on paper
30 x 40cm
2015

Standard Humming Turkey
Ink and watercolour on paper
30 x 40cm
2015

Magpie
Ink and watercolour on paper
30 x 40cm
2015

Toucan
Ink and watercolour on paper
42 x 55cm
2015

Baboon Bird
Ink and watercolour on paper
101 x 67cm
2015

Flamingo
Ink and watercolour on paper
59 x 42cm
2015

Tuesday 9 July 2013

Unfit Housing


Too Damp
Ink on paper 
40 x 30cm
2013

Too High
Ink on paper 
40 x 30cm
2013


Unfinished
Ink on paper 
30 x 40cm
2013

Occupied
Ink on paper 
42 x 30cm
2013




Posters 2013

Bow Psalter
Watercolour and ink on paper 
60 x 42cm
2013


Labour
Water colour and ink on paper 
60 x 42cm
2013


Potatoes Are Poison
Watercolour and ink on paper 
42 x 30cm
2013


The Yellow Tide Turns
Watercolour and ink on paper 
60 x 42cm
2013


The sewage loves this part of the shore and, in praise of her idle, ironical life it chose to splash itself all over the whiteness and all over the town.

Boiled Egg 
Richard Wilson

Saturday 23 February 2013

Coloured Pencils 2013

Battered Euphonium
Coloured pencil on paper
89 x 75cm
2013






Fry-up Face
Coloured pencil on paper 
60 x 42cm
2013




Sausage-nana
Coloured pencil on paper 
60 x 42cm
2013

Skeletal Remains

 
Bonafide Genius
Ink and watercolour on paper
80 x 60 cm
2010

A drawing that was made into a poster for the exhibition marking 10 years since the class of 2000 began at Byam-Shaw school of art. Note begging bowl and over-sized cranium.


Boar's Skull
Ink, acrylic and watercolour on paper
60 x 60cm
2011

On some Pacific islands in the New Hebrides there is a tradition in which wild boars are captured and tethered to a tree by the natives. The women of the village are then responsible for the care of the animals which are worshiped and considered sacred. The boars are hand fed so that their tusks are not worn down foraging for food. The tusks grow longer and longer and eventually loop back on themselves penetrating the skull of the pig. An animal that survives it is considered the most sacred. In some cases an animal can survive for years in agony and the tusks can form another loop entering the skull a second time. If the animal dies, the women taking care of it get the crap knocked out of them and the process begins again with another boar.

Toothless Gorilla
Ink and watercolour on paper
60 x 42cm
2011


Inspired by the story of two-million-year-old fossil of a human ancester found in the Republic of Georgia in 2005 which may be evidence of the first signs of early human compassion. The individual lived the last years of his life with only one tooth ,proved by the bone growth in his jaw. This shortcoming may have left him dependent on the kindness of others who may have chewed his food for him.


Box gibbon
Ink and watercolour on paper
101 x 67cm
2011




Sunday 17 February 2013

East London Anthropologist



Pool Shark
Ink on paper
37 x 30cm
2012
This series of drawings was produced early last year and is based on observations of our local area and some of the type of folks you see knocking around outside Iceland.

Builder
Ink on paper
37 x 30cm
2012 








Asian Junkie
Ink on Paper 
37 x 30cm
2012
An impression of a weird guy i saw whist trying to use the rubbish chute in our building. As I entered the bin room he stuck his hands behind his back and grinned at me. I dumped my rubbish and left him to his business.

Squaw
Ink on paper
37 x 30 cm
2012 


Recently a resident of our block has been chucking shitty nappies out the window. This caused another resident  to post a ravingly racial letter in the communal hallway. The culprit has yet to be identified.

Bigboy
Ink on paper
37 x 30 cm
2012 

Dog walker
Ink on paper
37 x 30cm
2012 

Pogo stick
Ink on paper
37 x 30 cm
2012 

Totem
Ink on paper
37 x 30  cm
2012