Exhibition

Fred Ingrams - Ditch

6 Dec 2016 – 7 Jan 2017

Event times

Tue - Sat 11 am 6 pm

Cost of entry

Free

Save Event: Fred Ingrams - Ditch3

I've seen this1

People who have saved this event:

close

Bermondsey Project Space

London
England, United Kingdom

Address

Travel Information

  • C10 Victoria to Canada Water (Stop F Bermondsey Street)
  • London Bridge - Borough
Directions via Google Maps Directions via Citymapper
Event map

This exhibition will feature new works by Fred Ingrams (1964), depicting the geometries of the Ditches that so strongly characterize The Fens.

About

Fred Ingrams was born in Berkshire in 1964.
He studied at Camberwell and St. Martins Schools of Art, where he was though expelled for being a disruptive influence, determined to use acrylics rather than oils…
His work was first noticed in Soho where he painted “quite sexual and angry nudes” that exhibited with, among others, Grayson Perry and Marc Quinn, and purchased by Francis Bacon.
He has worked as a graphic designer and art director on magazines such as the Sunday Times, The Field, Tatler, Vogue and House & Garden.
In 1998 he moved back to the countryside in Norfolk where he went back to painting landscapes.

The landscape of The Fens only exists because of the millions of gallons of water that are drained into the miles of ditches that surround every field. These ditches are the beginning of the huge man-made effort to take water from below sea level via drains and pump houses, into rivers and then finally out to sea.

Ditches are also the only places in The Fens that are not ploughed, drilled, harvested and most importantly sprayed with fertilisers and herbicides. They are nature’s refuge from this onslaught. Often called the hedgerows of The Fens, like hedges in the rest of our landscape, ditches form strips of seasonal life that are left to create their own habitats. Like hedges, ditches are cut and cleared every now and then to keep them working but everything quickly grows back and they fill again with reeds, flowers, warblers, reed buntings and dragonflies. As a result of all this nature ditches are subject to huge amounts of legislation and scrutiny.

(...)

To me these precious margins are just dividing lines that run at ninety degrees to each other and border the huge fields of crops. The fields they frame are slabs of ever-changing colour. You can look down them or across them. Depending on your viewpoint ditches form either horizontal lines that divide the landscape or converging lines that meet at the vanishing point. Looking down a ditch creates one kind of painting, looking across a ditch another. The result is two types of landscape. You can stand in a fenland field and see both at the same time, all you have to do is turn ninety degrees. Ditches create the landscape that I love and thereby create my paintings.

Fred Ingrams, 2016

What to expect? Toggle

Comments

Have you been to this event? Share your insights and give it a review below.