JH

Grindr goes Intaglio

AA
View Discussion
Luca Nicholas, Grindr Study #12, 2017, intaglio on Fabriano Artistico paper, 765 x 560 mm; image 395 x 395 mm. Luca Nicholas, Plaid, 2018, intaglio on Fabriano Artistico paper, 765 x 665 mm; image 340 x 390 mm. Luca Nicholas, Grindr Study #14, 2017, intaglio and chine-colle on Fabriano Unica paper, 500 x 695 mm; image 375 x 475 mm. Luca Nicholas, Grindr Study #10, 2017, intaglio and chine-colle on Fabriano Unica paper, 500 x 695 mm; image 445 x 580 mm. Luca Nicholas, Grindr Study #8, 2017, intaglio and chine-colle on Fabriano Unica paper, 500 x 695 mm; 390 x 595 mm.

Three of the lustier Grindr shots seem to feature bed or bathroom interiors as backdrops to the figures, but the larger fourth is a close up of a torso with a hand coyly positioned over the genitals. Its bodily proximity (with hairy forearms and stomach) is slightly unnerving. It is very intimate and Nicholas knows how to effortlessly manipulate spatial depth.

Auckland

 

Luca Nicholas
Studies 2017 - 18
Curated by Francis McWhannell (as part of Auckland Pride Festival)

 


11 February - 20 March 2021

Five heavily textured intaglio etchings of naked and semi-naked men are presented by Luca Nicholas in Visions, four of them—based on Grindr (online dating) downloads—being subtly tinted via chine-collé. They are vaguely reminiscent of early Hockney. Not so linear; more hatching.

The largest work is not derived from Grindr at all but features decorative bedroom furnishings and a figure resting on his stomach on a bed. The result is comical. His top half is completely hidden, leaving in the centre his dark crotch-covering shorts, and accentuating a strange foreshortening of his left leg—especially his swollen calf and (almost disembodied) bulbous foot that hovers alarmingly close to the viewer. A grid of tonally-controlled tartans dominates, on the descending bedspread.

Three of the lustier Grindr shots seem to feature bed or bathroom interiors as backdrops to the figures, but the larger fourth is a close up of a torso with a hand coyly positioned over the genitals. Its bodily proximity (with hairy forearms and stomach) is slightly unnerving. It is very intimate and Nicholas knows how to effortlessly manipulate spatial depth.

The two large works have a warm friendly intimacy and avoid a strident voyeurism by playing with notions of obstructing the gaze. The smaller ones are about introductions and body types, fishing for interest and potential physical contact or friendship.

Unlike Hockney these images have a specific purpose and don’t feature ‘dead’ domestic time with blokes sitting around in chairs, yakking. These guys are lonely or horny, and keen to connect within a suburban community.

The way the images are made is hugely different from photography, and so transcends social media, for its emphasis is on blocks of controlled light/darkness and densely packed criss-crossing lines with patterns of textures that you have to experience directly. Nicholas‘s techniques are several hundred years old. It is enthralling to see that methodology rejuvenated.

John Hurrell

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Stephen Bambury, Twenty Thirty (IX) (Night/Day) 2023. Lacquer & chemical action on two copper panels on ply, 170 x 340 mm

Bambury Show at Clark

TRISH CLARK GALLERY

Auckland

 

Stephen Bambury
Slow Burn (Redux)


20 March - 18 May 2024

JH
Installation view of Ava Seymour's Domestic Wild at Te Uru, Titirangi.

I Taut I Taw a Puddy Tat.

TE URU WAITAKERE CONTEMPORARY GALLERY

Titirangi

 

Ava Seymour
Domestic Wild


9 March - 26 May 2024

JH
Still from Gregory Bennett's animated film, Folding of the Time, 2024. Courtesy of Gregory Bennett.

Bennett and Vor-stellen Partnership

TE WAI NGUTU KĀKĀ GALLERY

Tamaki Makaurau


Gregory Bennett, Vor-stellen
Folding of the Time


20 April - 4 May 2024

JH
Installation view of Fiona Connor's Thump at Coastal Signs

Fiona Connor’s ‘Thump’

COASTAL SIGNS

Auckland

Fiona Connor

Thump

18 April 2024 - 25 May 2024