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James Adams was born in 1971. After completing a degree in Fine Art (Sculpture), James started up his own business in London designing and making metal furniture and products for the retail market as well as undertaking various private commissions from architectural ironwork through to product design and sculpture, teaching himself the rudiments of Blacksmithing along the way.
By late 2004 James decided to return to his roots in sculpture and painting and set up a workshop based in Highland Perthshire and a painting studio on the Isle of Skye.
ARTISTS STATEMENT
“Working as a sculptor and painter, I explore my experience of the land and seascapes of Scotland as well as the people, animals and objects that inhabit them, often highlighting tensions in their relationships with each other and with the landscape itself. I work from memories of such places, drawing upon a narrative within. This allows me to build a composition around a theme - the title will as often inform the work as the other way round. The perspectives in my work are the perspectives of memory, in which different stages of a narrative may be seen simultaneously or a scene may be viewed from above as if in a dream or a map.
My paintings attempt to evoke an immediacy - a pencil sketch is succeeded by washes of quick drying acrylic paint, allowing me to build up translucent areas of colour. Often the pencil outline of the painting is allowed to show through, creating an almost graphic account of the subject. I try to limit my palette to only a few colours - this helps reinforce the simplicity of form, in turn creating a balanced and rhythmic composition.
My steel sculptures identify with my paintings in that shared themes are explored and perspective is distorted. Pieces of steel are riveted to a forged armature, building a contour. As the viewer moves around the work, a slim profile gives way to a ‘metal tapestry’; different aspects of the story are revealed.
The influences within my work draw mostly upon Expressionism, Folk and British Naïve Art from the early and mid-20th century. As a trained artist the challenge I face is to ‘unlearn’ and let go of the constraints while benefiting from the technical control that a formal training brings. I hope to engage the viewer and provoke an interaction with the work, unleashing a once dormant childhood appreciation or stirring a haunting memory within.”
EXHIBITIONS
2010 Union Gallery, Edinburgh
Coastal Festival of Visual Arts
Purple Gallery
Airt Gallery
Inchmore Gallery
Inchmore Gallery Christmas Show
2009 Strathpeffer Pavilion Art Fair
HOS Members Autumn Exhibition, Inverness
VAS Members Exhibition, Dumfries
Left Bank Gallery
Blair Atholl Skills Trial
HOS ’09 Open Doors Event
Coast Festival of Visual Arts
Inchmore Gallery Summer Show
“All at Sea”, opening at The Bridge View Gallery
2008 Cromarty Arts Trust Christmas Fair
The Tighnabruaich Gallery
Friends of The Pavilion Art Fair, Strathpeffer
Inchmore Gallery Christmas Show
HOS ’08 at Eden Court
Perthshire Open Studios “Sculpture Trail”
Fortingall 2008
Fotheringham Gallery Christmas Exhibition
The Aspect Prize, Paisley Institute, Glasgow
Highland Open Studios
Inchmore Gallery Joint Show
The Aros Centre, Portree, SLACA Group Exhibition
Macmillan Art Show, Strathpeffer Pavilion
Mountain Festival Art Exhibition, Nevis centre, Fort William
Watermill (Aberfeldy) 2008 Fortingall Group Exhibition
Inchmore Gallery Christmas Show
The Leaping Hare Christmas Group Exhibition
2007 The Leaping Hare, Solo Exhibition
Fortinghall
Kilbryde Castle
Watermill 2007 Fortinghall Group Exhibition
2006 Gordonstoun OGs Art Works, Edinburgh Academy
Fortingall
2004 Fortingall