Jock McFadyen

A Book About a Painter

Jock McFadyen
  • Imprint: Lund Humphries
  • Illustrations: Includes 80 colour and 17 b&w illustrations
  • Published: March 2001
  • Format: 270 x 249 mm
  • Extent: 120 pages
  • Binding: Hardback
  • ISBN: 978-0-85331-791-3
  • Price : £45.00 » Website price: £40.50
  • BL Reference: 759.2
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  • David Cohen With contributions from Lewis Biggs, Humphrey Ocean, Howard Jacobson, Bob and Roberta Smith, Hugo Williams, Tom Lubbock, Ian Dury, Mary Rose Beaumont, Duncan Macmillan, Jeffrey Camp and Will Self

  • This is the first survey of the work of painter Jock McFadyen.

    McFadyen describes himself as a realist, and his intense paintings describe the urban backdrop. Human figures used to be central to these works, but having made pictures about London, New York, Berlin and Belfast, the locations have in many ways become the subject. In these monumental paintings, the central characters of his early work are replaced by commercial buildings, walkways, vomitories and the natural landscape.

    Although never part of any group or movement, McFadyen sees his main precedent as the line of British realism which includes Sickert, L.S. Lowry, the so-called School of London, and younger contemporaries such as Richard Billingham. He is close to the debate about painting and its relationship to contemporary art practice. He is also interested in those who have parallel concerns in other media. This book places the artist not simply within the recent history of British art, but also within the wider context of realism in film, the contemporary novel and music – from Hogarth to Punk and beyond.