The idea of psychological portraiture is central to Jason Boyd Kinsella’s artistic practice and lies at the very heart of Fragments, the artist’s first solo exhibition in London.
From a young age, Kinsella became fascinated by our individual psychological makeup, developing a keen interest in the Myers-Briggs personality test that is designed to break down our characters to specific sets of traits. He soon came to realise that it is the unique way in which these modular traits are organised that constitutes our individual natures. From this, the artist discovered a new lens through which to see people. Reflecting these notions, Kinsella’s striking portraits reduce each sitter to distinct building blocks. The varying shapes, colours and sizes of these blocks are specific to each portrait and interlock in a multitude of different ways. For Kinsella, these raw materials do not mean much on their own, but together they begin to interconnect, uniting to form singular relationships. Softer and rounder edges come together to convey more gentle attributes, whereas strong lines and sharp corners communicate harder personalities. In this sense, Kinsella intuitively explores each of his subjects from the inside out, creating uniquely accurate portraits of friends, acquaintances and strangers in his own distinctive visual language.
“Simple, colourful and expressive. Everyone is unique like a psychological fingerprint.”
On a technical level, Kinsella’s work displays an interesting juxtaposition between traditional methods and a hyper-contemporary aesthetic.
His use of oil paint creates a remarkably clean surface texture, reminiscent of Old Master works. Yet, Kinsella’s paintings draw equally from contemporary iconography, reimagining a culturally relevant balance between the old world and the new. In this spirit, Kinsella’s artistic process blends traditional techniques with modern tools. He always begins with a pencil drawing, before digitally experimenting with colours and values. Once these balances are ironed out, he turns to the canvas to paint the piece by hand, often creating a small mock-up of the work before as a test, similar to how a sculptor would make a maquette. As such, the building blocks that constitute Kinsella’s paintings are heavily influenced by sculpture and other three-dimensional forms, such as architecture and furniture, which have an important relationship with their surrounding physical space. The artist’s geometric shapes connect and interact with one another, avoiding the fixity of a single perspective and translating the feeling of three-dimensional biomorphic form onto a canvas. Equally, Kinsella’s experimentation with augmented reality enhances these interactive ideas, aiming to bridge the gap between the second and third dimensions and inviting viewers to experience his artworks physically in a non-physical way.
“I find it more fulfilling to feel something is accurate rather than to see something is accurate.”
Above all, it is this question of ‘who we really are’ that drives Kinsella’s practice and forms the foundations of the artworks presented in Fragments.
With the ever-mounting rise of social media, the artist has noticed a particular preoccupation with the deliberate construction and projection of cultivated personae. Social media seems to tap into a primitive desire we all have to transform into someone else; we use filters to enhance our features and we airbrush away our imperfections. With this in mind, it seems that our outer physical appearances can no longer be trusted. Many of us have multiple online personae, leading almost to a contemporary phenomenon of digital psychosis or virtually split personalities. We can perhaps lose sight of who we truly are when faced with a world in which there are so many outlets and mediums through which we can shape and reshape ourselves. In response to this uncertainty, Kinsella’s portraits aim to strip away the veneer of the digital, choosing instead to mine the inner realms of the self. Through an intuitive artistic process, that centres on feeling rather than thinking, Kinsella’s works drill down to the very core of the self, transcending representations of flesh and bone to create complete and accurate psychological portraits.
Writer and Curator, Sasha Bogojev, on Jason Boyd Kinsella
“The final concept Kinsella is working with today was moulded by a complex assemblage of diverse influences that he has experienced on a professional and personal level. The sculptures of Pablo Picasso and his fearless and driven urge to explore the unknown have been a significant influence on Kinsella, but this influence often gives way to the primitive and tribal art he discovered on his frequent travels around the globe. Growing up surrounded by exceptionally simple 8-Bit graphics and his current environment in Norway, which is characterised by simplicity, minimalism and functionality, have drawn Kinsella to the reduction of a subject to its basic, core marks. At the same time, his practice revolves around portraying existing people, whether his friends, acquaintances or a stranger who has somehow influenced him. This interest in biomorphic qualities and an enjoyment of the “feel” of the artwork rather than a compulsion to understand it, has certainly set the path for the body of work that comprises Kinsella’s major London debut, which also experiments with elements of augmented reality and 3D printing.
On a technical level, Kinsella’s masterful oil paintings are created using a mix of traditional methods and modern tools. Starting off with a drawing, Kinsella proceeds by finessing his concepts with 3D software, playing with the way that the light interacts with each block. Once he achieves a format that recalls the human face or the bone structure, he proceeds to render the image in oil on canvas. Having studied and revered the classical techniques of Old Masters, Kinsella’s futuristic-looking portraits are created using traditional painterly methods, from heavy and vigorous to delicate and silky blending. Appearing entirely digitally rendered, the visuals reveal, upon closer inspection, the qualities and the appeal of conventional hand painted works. With visible brushstrokes or occasional linework imperfections, these portraits bring the human element to otherwise meticulously perfect compositions, accentuating the artist’s main goal to create an accurate and honest portrait of the fragmented self. ” – An extract from Sasha Bogojev’s essay, entitled Fragments.
Exhibition Walk-through
Works
Jason Boyd Kinsella
Gerald
2021
Jason Boyd Kinsella
Mariss
2021
Jason Boyd Kinsella
Philip
2021
Jason Boyd Kinsella
Langston (in profile)
2021
Jason Boyd Kinsella
John
2021
Jason Boyd Kinsella
Study I
2021
Jason Boyd Kinsella
Study VII
2021
Jason Boyd Kinsella
Study XI
2021
Jason Boyd Kinsella
Study XX
2021
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