The Design Room Art Gallery
Prints
  • Other galleries: 
  • Anna Pugh
  • Brian Rogers
  • Charlie Rogers
  • Darren Mundy
  • Doug Hyde
  • Duncan Macgregor
  • Gordon Barker
  • Iain Faulkner
  • Inam
  • Jackie Stevenson
  • James Bartholomew
    • Other galleries: 
    • Animals
    • City Scapes
    • Cows
    • Seascape
  • James Blinkhorn
  • Jeremy Barlow
  • Jim Edwards
  • Joanne Wishart
    • Other galleries: 
    • Coastal
    • Wildlife
  • John Mould
  • Kate Philp
    • Other galleries: 
    • Giclee Prints
    • Limited Edtions
  • Ken Spencer
  • Kevin Day
  • Lillias Blackie
  • Paul James
  • Paul Stangroom
  • Quentin Blake
  • Ray Goldsbrough
  • Remi Labarre
  • Rolf Harris
  • Roy Francis Kirton
  • Sheree Valentine Daines
  • Stephen Doig
  • Steven Townsend

Iain Faulkner

Iain Faulkner was born in Glasgow in 1973 where he was raised and educated. He graduated from Glasgow School of Art in 1996 with a BA (Honours) Degree in Fine Art. From the onset of his professional career, the fashionable and trendy routes of contemporary and conceptual art, adopted by many of his peers, was not an option. He chose instead to follow the more difficult and demanding path of figurative painting wherein clear, concise yardsticks of competence, draughtsmanship and painterly skills can be measured and judged, warts and all. At the age of twenty-nine, the result of his endeavours during his relatively short career has brought a considerable measure of success with his last four shows in London and New York selling out which is clearly indicative of the public's appreciation and interest in his work. Faulkner's paintings are concerned with the portrayal of strong and powerful images relying on visual impact as there is rarely any narrative. They are about capturing calm and contemplative moments, intimate exchanges, solitude, sometimes melancholy, heightened in their resonance by the use of chiaroscuro. Faulkner's use of this technique gives a stark contrast between the light source and the often dark tonality found in his paintings. There is a stillness in the everyday themes which conveys a sense of inner-reflection. This is accentuated by the formality of his young self-engrossed characters and emphasised by the light and shadows reinforcing their emotional detachment. His charcoal drawings, included for the first time in a Faulkner show, are testament to his draughtsmanship; his awareness and acknowledgement of the prime importance of drawing and control of tone and to the peeling back of layers of paint thus revealing an insight into his creative process.
Back I

Back I

Final Viewing

Final Viewing

The 19th

The 19th

Wanderer

Wanderer

Home
Originals
Prints
Sculptures
Links
Contact us
Exhibitions
Powered by Clikpic
Template by Cite