LUKE HANNAM
GOD’S BODY & THE DEVIL’S CHAINS

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EXHIBITION DATES : In person and online from 31/3 - 20/5/2023

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INTRODUCTION :

“But for him who has seen the chaos, there is no more hiding, because he knows that the bottom sways and knows what this swaying means. He has seen the order and the disorder of the endless, he knows the unlawful laws. He knows the sea and can never forget it.” - Carl Jung

I could say that painting is a conversation with oneself - a constantly evolving pathway to a seemingly obvious, but strangely unknowable destination. What it can allow you to say clearly, it often takes away again in a cloud of mystery. As I write, I am not so foolish as not to be able to appreciate a potential discomfort with the flamboyance of such statements - such truths may appear grandiose or over the top, but that’s just the way it is, painting is like that. The exhibition title ‘God’s Body & the Devil’s Chains’ is, perhaps, another example of this kind of grandiosity, but it fits and it works and accepts the scale of the journey.

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I was messaged recently by a social media ‘friend’ that this title sounded like a Nick Cave song - his latest book, after all, is called ‘Hope, Faith and Carnage’. I like this comparison; I like Nick Cave. I like his courage to wrestle with the big themes of God, loss, love, religion, spirituality, no embarrassment shown, all pretensions embraced. in conversation with Sean O’Hagen stated: “The word ‘spirituality’ is a little amorphous for my taste. It can mean almost anything. Whereas the word ‘religious’ is just more specific, perhaps even conservative, has a little more to do with tradition.” I respond to the courage of this statement. I may not understand it fully, but I believe it. I like to grapple with ideas greater than my understanding. To lay my hands on that nagging sense of doubt, and embrace that clear feeling of being ‘damned if you do and damned if you don’t’. The eternal dysfunction of life itself, the hostility, the confusion, the demonic dynamism and the eternal quest for meaning all offer an impetus.

For me the exhibition title refers to what Leonard Cohen spoke of as “a bittersweet”, a need he felt to maintain a belief that everything springs from the tension of opposites. Fantasy occurrences dreams and visions, images of what I would like to be yet fear to become. Painting over the last two years has been a series of encounters with what Carl Jung called “a very real truth.” A facing up to the shadow self, a synesthesia of mind body and soul, an encounter with the subconscious. The characters in my paintings are all me, male and female, good and bad, moral and amoral, earthly and unearthly. These characters are intuitively drawn from a theatrical world of fantasy, myth, religious iconography and more recently from Jung’s list of the universal archetypes, which he termed the collective subconscious.

There has been an exhilarating, terrifying yet somewhat affirming realisation that my visual senses are perhaps helmed, not by the outside world, but somewhere deep within my own Psyche. The paintings are in a very real sense manifestations, a call to being, an attempt to give form to an internal theatre, a script written by the Psyche to be followed through in everyday life. Jung spoke of a demonic dynamism, the shadows made visible with the purpose being to integrate the darker side of ‘Self’ with the so-called civilised consciousness. My paintings depict hostility, stasis, desire, cognitive dissonance, longing, yearning, fulfilment and emptiness. Titles such as ‘The Hypnotist’, ‘The Contortionist’, ‘The Sleeping Yo-Yo’, ‘The Puer Aeturnus’ and ‘The Death of the Child’ are deliberate references to Jung’s research into the structure of the archetype and have helped me to recognise and give life to these psychological and mythological states of mind. The drawings included in the show, a selected glimpse of my prolific outpouring, reveal the process by which these images emerge. Complex, frenetic, inter woven, entanglements or contradiction, tension, everything all at once coexisting. Images on the cusp of mania or an overwhelmed and overcrowded inner world at times claustrophobic and beyond my control, spill out. I must not fear overstatement, so I don’t - I embrace it. Scale, complexity, ideas beyond my own knowledge, all, in the end, rely on my deep faith in humanity and firm belief that love will find a way.

Luke Hannam, 2023

ONLINE CATALOGUE :

Chaos is God’s body. Order is the Devil’s chains
— John Updike

3D VIRTUAL TOUR (CLICK TO VIEW) :

EXHIBITION ARTWORKS (CLICK FOR FULL DETAILS) :

DR MARTIN SHAW IN CONVERSATION WITH LUKE HANNAM :

*Dr Martin Shaw  is an award winning author, artist and oral storyteller who is widely regarded as one of the most exciting teachers of the mythic imagination. Director of the Westcountry School of Myth, founder of the Oral Tradition and Mythic Life programs at Stanford University, Reader in Poetics at Dartington Arts School, and Principal teacher at the Great Mother conference in the US. His conversation and catalogue with acclaimed artist Ai Weiwei is available through the Marciano Arts Foundation and his talk 'Art, Land and Shamanism’ recently took place at Tate Modern. The poet Robert Bly describes him as “a true master, and one of the very greatest storytellers we have.” 

BIOGRAPHY :


Luke Hannam describes his work as the result of an ‘ordered chaos’ where poetic paintings are made ‘in the eye of the storm’, where creativity spins wildly, through bursts of impulse around a silent meditative deep well of meaning. Ideas emerge out of an energetic dedication to drawing and a relentless desire to explore images and motifs. His work is instantly recognisable through his strong punch of colour and definite use of line which weaves its way sensuously across the surface, denoting both the delicacy and strength of the form and spirit of the subject. Hannam’s paintings expressively offer a singular view on how what he sees, how he thinks and pivotally how he feels about the human condition and what lies beyond our materiality. His work could be seen to continue the Romantic tradition, embracing reality and mysticism with the wonder of experience.

Luke Hannam was born in 1966 and currently lives in East Sussex, UK. He studied Fine Art in the 1980s and whilst others of his generation faithfully chanted the conceptual mantra of the time, Hannam focussed on perfecting his expressive drawing skills seeking inspiration from the earlier masters. Works have been exhibited and collected internationally, including the collections of Stefan Simchowitz and David Kowitz. ‘God’s Body & The Devil’s Chains’ is Hannam’s second solo exhibition at Anima Mundi.