|
Excerpt:
Known for his complex carved creations located in unexpected
places, Ben Wilson has recently become a familiar figure
sprawled on the pavements of London. Having seen many
of his sculptures vandalised and destroyed, he has come
out of the woods and onto the streets to explore a new
medium in a different setting – miniature paintings
on discarded chewing-gum.
In previous years Wilson had become enraged by all
the rubbish, cars and industrial waste that had become
an integral part of urban society. Retreating to the
woods, he worked in secret, but he still came face to
face with litter. After a while he began to work with
the rubbish that he found, collecting cigarette-butts
and crisp packets and incorporating them in his collages.
Working with old chewing-gum in situ seemed to be a
natural progression from this.
Wilson started experimenting with occasional chewing-gum
paintings in 1998, but it was not until October 2004
that he decided to work on them full time. For a number
of years he had tried to make a difference to the urban
environment by painting on billboards and adverts, but
this illegal activity often led to conflict with the
law. The new medium of chewing-gum freed him to make
miniature paintings anywhere in London for himself or
anyone else without having to obtain
|
permission, and enabled him to work in the spontaneous
manner that he has always treasured. ‘Our environment
is very controlled and what we need so very strongly
is diversity. Even galleries, museums, publishing companies
are all very controlled. I want to be able to do my
work and to bypass bureaucracy,’ he asserts.
Starting in Barnet High Street, North London, Wilson
embarked on what he intended would become a trail of
pictures that people could follow from the most northerly
part of London all the way into the city. However, almost
two years later, he still focuses the majority of his
time in Barnet, where he grew up, and Muswell Hill,
where he now resides with his partner Lily and their
three children. Having been asked by many people to
paint a picture for them or a loved one, he has become
deeply involved in the lives of the area’s residents.
He explains, ‘I know a lot of the shopkeepers, road
sweepers and local police. As I walk down the street,
every few steps I think of a picture I have to do for
someone. I have all this in my head, which makes me
feel closer to the place and the people.’ He hopes his
work will encourage in others an awareness of their
surroundings and give children a sense of connection
with their local environment – something he believes
fewer people have these days.
|