Act natural: a conversation with Matthew... Simon Oliver: What are you working on currently? Matthew Johns: A series of paintings which take their lead from video- taped sports footage. I’ve been video-taping live sports coverage, and using the material in forming an initial image, which I begin to paint from. SO: Replicating video stills in oil paint? MJ: Well, recovering the viewing experience in paint. Attempting to locate similarities and points of departure in the live visual flow of the television image, and in the still painting surface. Paint is physically mediated in the phase of making, so it is a moving image of sorts at the point of inception. SO: You actually paint from the moving image then? MJ: No, I use a digital camera in order to pluck-out an image from a passage that appeals. SO: And what is it that appeals? MJ: I was interested in the way live TV is produced, particularly sports coverage as it is simultaneously edited and created as the event unfolds. Cameras following action and the live manipulation of the spectacle. There are also formal interests, the type of mark produced by the screen, and in turn the digital camera, a kind of gestural grid-bound pixel as opposed to the haptic brush stroke, but hands are behind the scenes somewhere, conducting operations. Anyway, it is using this as a type of digital cartography as a springboard from which to proceed ‘freehand’, as they say. SO: Handiwork. MJ: There’s also a particular kind of TV light, made in-studio but transferred to the screen. This stage-managed artificial light isn’t too far away from the controlled light of painted interiors from art history, Chardin, Vermeer, Caravaggio. SO: Isn’t this conflation of art and popular culture, sports in this case, a rather tenuous link, conforming to a media driven vogue for fresh combinations of cultural matter? MJ: I suppose there are correspondences with what is superficial ephemera; Sunday supplement chaff. I think the idea of lifestyle media operates in a different continuum altogether. No, for me the work comes from the experience of looking. I’d taken to taping football highlights in order to enjoy passages of play again, the stuff that warranted closer inspection. This led to thinking that certain sport forms share common ground with specific modes of art. I mean visually, in a formal sense you have a prepared rectangle, literally drawn-out, white painted lines on a cut green surface. This is at the centre of an appropriate architecture, designed to showcase a human engagement taking place. Add to that the simultaneous and perpetual mediation and dissemination of the game, this television production is what I find compelling as a subject for painting. It is also my, or shall I say ‘our’ place in the scheme of TV consumption that I wish to acknowledge too. SO: What do you mean? MJ: Consider what, if anything, the term active-viewing could mean… So I decided to act, how might I become part of the televisual circuit, Baudrillard says something about a ‘ciphering strip’, he seems to imply this as a closed entity, I don’t see why that has to be the case. Perhaps it is more than possible to interrupt the one-way stream with viewer’s input, not feedback, but input, actual and acting. What I see as a live, ongoing image circulation. After I’d taped the action I realized I could use the material in other ways than watching it, so I made digital photographs from the screen, to check how the camera would interpret the moving video image, and I photographed the fast- forwarding and rewinding image. SO: Why the fast-forwarding and rewinding images? MJ: I see it as a form of sculpting or drawing with the tape. And also playing with recovering a memory, what some like to describe as Proustian. Well, recovering a memory, yes, indelibly inscribed on a piece of tape, like Rauschenberg’s erased De Kooning; wiped away, but De Kooning’s mark is in there. I thought of painting from the taped and photographed image as physically expanding it, knocking it into a different, but relevant shape, the nascent tendrils of a memory web. I liked the notion of trying to paint the scan bars which lie across the speeding image, like video jet-stream or the cartoon velocity lines of Roadrunner.the scan-bars offered a potential in paint handling, something like Monet’s conception of a water surface, if you follow me? SO: I suppose, in the sense that Monet captured a way of seeing water surfaces, and at the same time was explicit in his acknowledgement of the painted brushstroke. What you seem to be doing is attempting to find a place for painting among the slew of techno-images we are all confronted by these days. MJ: Most people, more or less, possess a TV/sofa set-up in their homes. A space designed with a view to a screen. There may even be a channel featuring water gardens too. SO: I’d like to return to what you said earlier about the similarities between art and sports. You talked of a formal overlap, but were there any other properties you had in mind? MJ: Yes, there’s an order, a structure with rules and systems. There’s technique, and applied knowledge, which is offset by a benign chaos coming out of human action, in turn, yielding improvisation and the unexpected, the need to adapt to a mutable circumstance. This is of course liberally peppered with futility, mistakes and frustration, boredom at times. However, the negatives serve to heighten the elusive moments of skill, beauty even, in hushed tones we could even talk of the sublime. Chance would be a fine thing though. But getting back to the painting project, after all the talk of the arena of play, it was the TV studio itself that I painted, or rather a room in the stadium used by the production unit. It was the idea of former professionals proffering opinion, the critical category of punditry as it has become known. This to me is a transferable allegory of many things. SO: I see what you’re saying. Men in suits negotiating, offering or imposing their expert analyses, sounds familiar. Gravitas swaddled in Armani. mj: Exactly. Boardroom, sales seminar, The Hague. The body language of these former athletes learning a completely new body language, at first they seem so cardboard, mirroring each others physical positioning in mutual cliché. But you soon start to see them adapt and find a way of being, at least seeming natural, a way of letting a little bit of themselves seep into the cipher strip, which I suppose is the key isn’t it? SO: That’s it, the method, the line… “Just act natural”, “Action!” London, 2009. *Simon Oliver is a writer and designer living and working in London