Arts Thread

Felix Bode
Fine Art BA Hons

Glasgow School of Art

Specialisms: Painting / Printmaking / Photography

Location: Liverpool, United Kingdom

felix-bode1 ArtsThread Profile
Glasgow School of Art

Felix Bode

Felix Bode ArtsThread Profile

First Name: Felix

Last Name: Bode

Specialisms: Painting / Printmaking / Photography

Sectors:

My Location: Liverpool, United Kingdom

University / College: Glasgow School of Art

Course / Program Title: Fine Art BA Hons

About

My practice melds the mediums of oil painting and printmaking and is characterised by an interplay between spontaneity and precision. Using photography is not an end in itself, but rather as a source of inspiration, providing reference material for my research. In the words of Gerhard Richter painting “shows something that isn't there”, something that is not possible through photography alone. 

Through my work, I am reconciling two contradictory notions: the ephemeral and fluid nature of time and the intensity of individual thought and feeling. My paintings depict vast scenes that are detached from the feeling I attribute to them, emphasising the fleeting nature of images in the contemporary world. It is through the process of painting that I connect scenery and inner emotion. 

I am inspired by the blankness of images one sees when travelling, lost in thought, and the post-industrial landscapes that pass the window at high speed. The images I paint are blank stares, gazing into the distance – similar to the feeling of travelling home and being consumed by my thoughts or feelings. The detachment of your inner consciousness and your surroundings intrigues me.

I am particularly drawn to the vehicles that propel us through this ever-shifting world—trams, trains, cars, planes—symbols of societal progress. Just looking at the massive changes that these vehicles have endured through the years is an experience strong enough to open a discussion on how their representation has changed. 

My studio practice is responding to the fastness of the photographic sources. I prefer to use a trial-and-error-based approach than a slow build-up of my work. I am responding to the saturation and prolificacy of images in contemporary society. I cover the surface in thick oil paint and wipe away using solvents and various self-made tools to uncover the bright ground colour. In this manner, the paintings themselves become ‘almost abstractions’ of the images I take, which is inspired by the paintings of Carol Rhodes. Through editing, projecting, painting, wiping away, and repainting, the image changes and holds a trace of what was originally seen.

I like to look at this process as if it would be the specific moment when an image in my head slips away as I try to remember it. I am interested in the properties of images and their very particular transitory status in the contemporary world. The ever-changing mental representation of an image from memory is an element of significant importance in my practice. In the end, each painting is usually adjacent to someone I have met or is present in my life. Their presence continues in the act of painting, and the image can be influenced by thoughts from a different time or space.

These paintings and prints were made for my Degree show at the Glasgow School of Art. I was exploring how we see the world from high-speed vehicles, how we’re insulated and protected from the outside by machines. The paintings verge between the recognisable and the abstract. After travelling a lot in the past year, l found myself in a plane or train or car every few weeks, constantly moving through spaces I never stop at. Simultaneously these anonymous places become so meaningful to me because they are the spaces in which I am reflecting. I wanted to bring this experience to my audience through reliving these moments in thick, viscous paint, and wiping it away to reveal a passing, volatile moment.