|
|

Chris Bennett was born
in London in 1957 and studied at the Slade School of Fine Art in the
early 80s under Euan Uglow, Geoffrey Camp and Phil Sutton. He has
exhibited regularly at the Royal Academy Summer Show and with the Royal
Institute of Oil Painters at the Mall Galleries, London. His current
works are to be seen in prestigious galleries around the UK.
A notable commission is a portrait of Sir William Hawthorne, now in the
collection of Churchill College, Cambridge who, with Sir Frank Whittle,
designed the first jet engine. Chris paints an internal world, a
distillation of something seen or half glimpsed in life, which is
digested and later realised as a formal image; he is painting an ideal,
not an idea. The paintings are the outcome of giving an external shape
to an internal experience.
Looking back at his pictures, Chris recognizes the events that occur in
them and remembers them taking place before him, the way one remembers
the first meeting with people whom one comes to love most dearly.
To give pictorial expression to these events is what guides these
paintings to their realisations. For Chris, there must always be a seed,
the grain of sand in the oyster which symbolises what is most important
in the artists eyes, that is alive and continues to live in oneself as
the picture is born and grows.
|