Galleries - March 2025

PRESS RELEASE: ARTIST USES LAYERS OF PAINT TO CROSS THROUGH SPACE AND TIME IN NEW EXHIBITION IN LEWES In her new exhibition ‘Crossing Over’, Kate Scott uses layers of paint to represent the passage of time in bold, colourful works that speak of grief, resilience and transcendence. She has written: “Painting (for me) is like reverse onion peeling, with each covering of paint revealing more of the truth, and the core of whatever one is trying to say, through adding layers you are also removing layers, showing your passage through time.” The title describes a crossing over in time for her in the last year or two since her mother’s illness and death. “It’s a metaphor for how I feel about life. I have become very resilient, and I’m someone who always believes I can get through difficult things, I alchemise experiences through my work, which is a hugely positive way for me to process.” she says. She painted ‘Partitioning’ when her mother only had six weeks to live. It started out a glossy dark blue, quite male, and elegant. Then a few days before her mother died, she mixed up a soft peachy pink which went everywhere, with vertical lines carved through it. “It was flooding with light. It felt like something transcending from being very heavy and held down and dark to being lifted up and almost floating off. It was about how I felt inside myself as I moved from being daughter of a mother who is alive to letting her go.” There is a strong connection between Scott’s emotional and physical state and her artwork. If a mark doesn’t mean anything, she will wipe it away; it must speak to her to earn its place. “I like accidents and drips, but I would never do it just for decoration. It must have a resonance,” she says. Working from her converted studio at home, Scott always listens to music, mainly classical composers to help open a part of her brain from which the painting flows. Play, drawing and being experimental are extremely important, “the work emerges through a process of addition and subtraction and some risk taking”. Painting in acrylics allows Scott to work quickly. She begins with random washes of colour and rarely has a plan in mind; if there is one, she doesn’t stick to it. Her process is like a conversation or dance. If a colour doesn’t work, at least it takes her to the next step, like a pendulum. A painting is complete once it stops talking to her which could be within one session, days, or weeks. It is important to her to be brave and raw and create work that is a bit uncomfortable. While on one level her work may seem random, she believes most abstract paintings have a sort of logic to them. “I don’t think anything is random, it’s all to do with what we humans recognise as interesting or

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy NDg4NDg=