CALLUM EATON: LOOK BUT DON’T TOUCH

CALLUM EATON: LOOK BUT DON’T TOUCH
Portrait of Callum-Eaton Photography by Brynley Odu Davies

CALLUM EATON: LOOK BUT DON’T TOUCH
17th August 2023 – 9th September 2023
CARL KOSTYÁL
12A SAVILE ROW
LONDON
W1S 3PQ

Carl Kostyál proudly presents ‘Look but don’t touch’, Callum Eaton’s debut solo exhibition with the gallery. “Having pursued that particular painterly perfection of photorealism since his time at Goldsmiths (BA Fine Art, 2019), Callum Eaton watched on with a sense of satisfaction when an inebriated attendee of an early open studio session attempted, inevitably in vain, to interact with a two-dimensional depiction of a conventional cash machine. The frustrated fumblings of Eaton’s incapacitated patron recall that renowned Grecian tale of illusionary artworks, Zeuxis and Parrhasius’ contest of artistic artifice. The latter, incensed at the former’s ability to produce a still-life so accurate that birds would fly down in an effort to pick at the grapes portrayed, decided to develop his own deceitful depiction.

CALLUM EATON: LOOK BUT DON’T TOUCH
Forgive Me Father for I Have Sinned, 2023,
Oil and Acrylic on Canvas, 210x210cm.
Image Courtesy of Carl Kostyál and the Artist

When complete, Parrhasius invited his unwitting rival to view his latest masterpiece, safely stored behind the draped curtains of his studio. Upon reaching out to unveil the artwork, an unsuspecting Zeuxis encountered only solid surface and yielded to the superior draughtsman, the curtains themselves being Parrhasius’s painting. Following his solo exhibition ‘Hole in the Wall’ at Paris’ Long Story Short gallery early this year, where the artist presented a suite of the aforementioned super flat and functionless ATM machines, Eaton returns for a London debut featuring an expanded selection of the oft-overlooked street furniture and urban architecture that populate the artist’s hometown.

Imbued with an acute awareness of conceptual art developed during his time at Goldsmiths and a wry critique of the ever-increasing commercialisation of contemporary culture and 21st-century society, Eaton’s artworks are self-referential to their own superficiality. Inhabiting a world reduced to two dimensions, these everyday objects intended for our interaction – their coin slots, keypads and buttons eagerly awaiting use – appear rather as readymades.

CALLUM EATON: LOOK BUT DON’T TOUCH
Who’s Lost Mary, 2023, Oil and Acrylic on Canvas, 165x70cm.
Image Courtesy of Carl Kostyál and the Artist.

They retain their form but lose their function. Akin to the austere Constructivist art of the 20th-century Soviet Union in their objectification of industrial and urban design; Futurist monuments to the now-outdated modern marvels of the technological world or even entertaining that Formalist tendency to assess an artwork purely on its aesthetic appearance or visual construction. Geometric Abstraction, sans abstraction.

Street-side telephone boxes made all but obsolete by mobile phones and now regularly removed by councils and city planners, remain as reliquaries to unrelenting digital advancement. Coca-Cola vending machines replete with Warholic repetition expose Eaton’s labour-intensive like-for-like replication ofon-demand appeasement, while elevators from the artist’s own City of London-located studio space retain eerie echoes of their former life ferrying bankers and business people.

CALLUM EATON: LOOK BUT DON’T TOUCH
Fizzy, 2023, Oil and Acrylic on Canvas, 200x110cm.
Image Courtesy of Carl Kostyál and the Artist

Employing that trompe-l’œil trickery popularised by French genre-painter Louis-Léopold Boilly – whose portrayal of overlaidsheets of paper was selected for the Paris Salon of 1800 – Eaton doggedly documents his everyday environment, each painting becoming a new piece ofhis Sims-esque city-building expansion pack. And just as the artist is present in Jan van Eyck’s famed Arnolfini Portraiteaster-egg or the secret self-portraits that Baroque-period painter ClaraPeeters snuck into her still-lives, Eaton himself appears as both an apparition reflected in the door of a launderette’s Washeteria and the example images one might obtain from a Photo-Me self-service photo-booth. The artist as subject -as object perhaps – blurring the lines between the real world he inhabits, andthe flattened substrata simulation that exists on the surface of each canvas.”

©2023 Callum Eaton