• Biography

    Mold 2007

    Gold Medal for Fine Art

    Emrys Williams was born in Liverpool in 1958 and moved with his family to Colwyn Bay on the North Wales coast in 1969. He studied at the Slade School of Fine Art, London (1976-1980).

    He  has exhibited widely in Britain and has shown in important group exhibitions including the 12th Liverpool John Moores Painting Exhibition (1982) where he was a prizewinner and the Serpentine Summer Show (1983). He has held three one man shows in London at the Benjamin Rhodes Gallery and has had major public touring shows.

    His work is in many public collections such as the Arts Council of England, the Government Art Collection, the National Museum of Wales and the Metropolitan Museum , New York.

     

    Emrys has an upcoming  solo exhbition at Benjamin Rhodes Arts, Shoreditch, London in September/October  2026

     

     
  • Mold 2007

    The three large paintings that won the Gold Medal in Fine Art in 2007 were part of a large series started in 2005. A number of experiences also fed in to the development of these pieces; a period when Iwas awarded a Creative Wales award by the Arts Council of Wales which gave me time to work and go to exhibitions, an earlier residency with the Welsh National Opera when I had designed a set and a residency in Dalkey Ireland which helped me evolve new subject matter.

  • I had gone through a period of deconstructing my work, moving away from a flatter approach to surface and thinking about my work in the early nineteen eighties which was larger and more physical and painterly. So the paintings in the Eisteddfod had a theatrical element with the interior paintings being like a set or “mise en scene”. In Dalkey I made small paintings where the town became like a miniature game with moveable elements; a church, the lighthouse, Dalkey Island ( I called it Dinky Dalkey). 

    “Table” is a much larger painting that built upon the approach in Dalkey. “Chair” includes an image of a house in a window, a motif derived from an actual modernist house in the town. “Epiphany “ reflects sea views from the town as well as images derived from other sources.

    At the time I had been thinking about  “The Poetics of Space” by Gaston Bachelard. It is a book that has influenced may artists as it deals with ideas about space and what  Carl Jung called the “topography of the mind”; as children we make dens out of blankets and sheets or hide in a wardrobe,; we all feel different in an attic as opposed to a living room or a church. Part of my approach to the series of large works was to think of generic objects or spaces as a starting point i.e. chair, table, island , town etc

    As an artist I think that the studio is like an island and working on a large painting is like embarking on a long   journey. Although in retrospect there seems to be a logic in my account of the development of these works they were made from a place of “not knowing” and each work was a discovery, made through a process of experimentation and improvisation.

     
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