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Mark
King, a champion of Impressionism and the Ecole de Paris, was born in
Bombay in 1931 of British parents. He is the product of an exotic and
privileged upbringing in India, where he lived until the age of sixteen
during the tumultuous last days of the British Raj. In 1948, following
graduation from La Martiniere College in Calcutta, where his focus had
been botany as well as art, King sailed to England to attend Bournemouth
College of Art, having determined to pursue painting, sculpture, architecture
and theatre design. He subsequently spent seven years as Resident scenic
designer at the Oxford Playhouse Theatre, but in 1961 decided to concentrate
on painting and moved to Paris to study at the Ecole and the Louvre.
Change has been an important catalyst in Mark King's
life as well as his art. When he lived in Paris and Italy during the 1960's,
he was a plein air painter, working out-of-doors in order to study
and describe the effects of light and atmosphere like the Barbizon School
and Impressionists before him. His move to the United States in 1968 prompted
a shift in his working methods. Now he labors exclusively in the studio.
For subjects he knows intimately, like Paris street scenes, King draws
from memory. For sporting subjects, on the other hand, the camera is an
indispensable tool. He takes several photographs of a subject, condensing
various views or themes into one composition, without exactly reproducing
nature. Small pencil sketches noting color and compositional motifs act
as reminders of feelings and responses to events and vistas King admires.
From these two sources, King produces vibrant preliminary drawings in
gouache, devising structural and visual solutions for larger canvases,
which he executes in acrylic. King consciously handles gouaches like watercolor,
blocking out the backgrounds of his drawings with thin washes, preferring
thicker impasto for surface treatment. Several canvases are in process
at once. King masterfully manipulates a palette knife ninety percent of
the time, only using a brush for small details. He moves freely from one
subject and medium to another, gaining energy as he tackles the physical
and mental demands of each composition.
King has carefully studied the old and modern masters
from Cimabue and Massacio to Goya, Turner, Degas, and Bonnard. Fascinated
with painting techniques, King meticulously layers colors, glazes and
shapes as substrata for the five or ten percent of the acrylic paint that
floats on top and forms the finished composition. The underpainting filters
through to the surface creating depth and texture. Because of his alla
prima approach, in which a painting is realized in a burst of inspiration
and single application of pigments, King confesses, "It is not until the
last ten to fifteen minutes before completion that I am able in to see
where the painting is going and catch the mood of the moment."
King follows in the footsteps of Courbet and the
Impressionists, painting what he sees, such as the familiar streets, monuments
and quarters of Paris. King never fully defines his seductive faces and
figures, which he often shows from behind, as if they too were silent
observers like himself. Passionate about horses since his youth, King's
animated depictions of polo and the fox hunt derive from personal experience.
His interest in big game dates from India, where elephants and camels
roam the streets and tigers and other large cats can easily be seen in
their natural habitat. In addition to King's fascination with the fauna
of Central Asia, he has also retained a keen fascination for the flora
of the region as well as botany in general, which he incorporates into
his compositions. Since his arrival in the United States, as King became
more exposed to sports, he capitalized on the drama and visual spectacle
of ice hockey and horse racing, as well as his love of the out-of-doors
by treating subjects like yacht racing, golf and tennis from a seascape
or landscape point of view.
Like the Impressionist Masters, Mark King uses
his eye as a passive organ, confronting the visual field. Objective and
detached, he considers himself an "unobserved observer." He explains,
"I make no judgements about what I see -- there is no right or wrong --
it is there to be assimilated." King believes, "When there is no jamming
of the cosmic forces influencing our receptivity, those energies and forces
feed into us and it is those briefest fractions of a second when things
flow."
King's versatility and zest for life transform
everything he paints into strong patterns of brilliant color. His subtle
understanding of how color, texture and paint interact is his strong point.
Color conveys feelings and emotions in the creation of a timeless art,
and now in the full maturity of his career, he has achieved superb mastery
of his palette.

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