Martin Reed

Masters | MFA


My work has evolved through an investigation into contemporary societies and the concept that modern civilisations have transitioned from a ‘solid’ to ‘liquid’ modernity. This means that we no longer seek a well-ordered world of stable structures but desire a world in which change, and uncertainty is the only certainty. In my paintings I attempt to expose that this thread of uncertainty has always been an undercurrent and that mankind has never been fully comfortable with modernity. This is evidenced by the conflicting ideologies that have existed throughout the entirety of modernism. Westernisation promotes that through globalisation, capitalism and human progress we will gain utopia through technological, scientific and philosophical advancements. However, artists, social movements and subcultures have always exposed their dissatisfaction with modern ideologies and offer alternative concepts to human existence.

This has led me to identify and experiment with a variety of painting processes that have been instrumental and pivotal to the historical development of modern painting. This has resulted in abstract paintings that for me chronicle modernity throughout its history from its birth in industrialisation to present day hyperconnectivity. It is important that I do not try and control everything in my paintings, changeability, unpredictability and experimentation are the values associated with liquid modernity and this is what I aim to express. I think this is fitting in a world where we can no longer tolerate anything that lasts. Novelty, momentary impulses, short-term perspectives and uncertainties dominate attitudes and outlooks. Today, being modern means to compulsively reinvent modernism with no fixed destination in sight and none desired.

Other Exhibitors:

Jason Rouse

Jason Rouse

"I am a multi-disciplinary artist creating work exploring conflict, community, immigration and simulation through the skewed view of contemporary internet culture. My work can take the form of computer games, sound, video, paintings and digital objects. For this...

Nigel Ash

Nigel Ash

The installation shows the object from Nigel Ash's Excavation mounted for display to the general public. The extent of the object that can be seen projecting above the base measures 40 cm x 40 cm x 112 cm. The site of the original Excavation was behind CSAD opposite...

Sam Kitcher

Sam Kitcher

"My work originally started as a method to raise awareness about the challenges that people with autism face. The artwork was always representational and initially took the form of static creations, such as sculptures. This did not convey the full meaning of my work...

Matt Lewis

Matt Lewis

My photographic work is generated by the act of walking in the city, and the instinctive relationship I build with the landscape forms the basis of both the images I create and their style of presentation. My photographs typically seek to portray the mood and...

Sam Lucas

Sam Lucas

Only through the making do I look in. Not a looking predominantly with my eyes, a looking with my body, ending and beginning with my hands or more precisely my finger tips and thumb. Both hands working together in a repetitive, cathartic, rhythmic motion. Twisting...

Ashleigh Parsons

Ashleigh Parsons

Red, the feeling of enticement combined with deep red, the alluring pull of seductive intrigue. Black, the tension between intimacy and venture, and gold, the ripple of fulfilment. The abstract physical feelings turn into alluring colours to reveal feminine burning...