purchased by The Richmond Hill Gallery 2019.signed Mach
Literature
DAVID MACH RA
one
of the UKs most respected artist David Mach RA .
Recognised
worldwide for his imaginative sculptures and installations this extraordinary
sculpture “Keeper of the flame: David Mach R A (b. 1956) is a Scottish sculptor
and installation artist and currently Professor of Sculpture at the Royal
Academy Schools. In the 1980s, Mach began to produce his matchstick series,
where he re-imagines human or animal heads using coloured upturned heads of
matches to create 3D artworks. The sculptures are crafted by first making a
clay model of the head and then moulding a fibreglass or plastic version upon
which the matchsticks are glued. He uses Japanese matchsticks as their heads
come in a variety of different colours. After accidentally setting fire to one
of these heads, Mach started to ignite his pieces as a form of performance art;
he set alight his sculpture of the devil's head to mark the start of the
Edinburgh Art Festival in 2011. Mach describes his work as "big in gesture
and big in proportion; it demands your attention and gets it". These
wonderful sculptures reflect this statement with great effect.
Biography
David
Mach is one of the UK’s most successful and respected artists, known for his
dynamic and imaginative large scale
collage,
sculpture and installations using a wide range of materials, including coat
hangers, matches, magazines and many
others.
The Scotsman describes his work as ‘big on gesture and big in proportion, it
demands your attention and gets it’.
Mach’s
first solo exhibition was held at the Lisson Gallery, London in 1982. His
international reputation was quickly established
and
he has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions around the world including
London, New York, Los Angeles,
Melbourne,
Hong Kong, Hakone, Tel Aviv and Warsaw. Public commissions include the tumbling
telephone boxes, “Out of
Order”
in Kingston, “Train” in Darlington; “Big Heads”, visible from the M8 between Glasgow
and Edinburgh; “It Takes Two”,
sited
North of Paris and in Marseille, Likeness Guaranteed commissioned by McMaster
Museum of Art, Hamilton, and
most
recently, “Giants” in Vinadio, Italy and “Phantom”, commissioned by Morrisons
supermarket for the Promenade in Kirkcaldy, Fife
Born
in 1956 in Fife, David Mach attended Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art where
he chose to specialise in sculpture
because
he thought it was the most demanding, intellectually and physically. Following
a postgraduate year, Mach won a
scholarship
to attend Art College in Warsaw. As Martial Law had been declared in Poland, he
was unable to take up his
place
but instead was invited to do his MA at the Royal College of Art.
Mach
became a part-time lecturer in the Sculpture School, Kingston University from
1982 to 1986 and was a lecturer at
the
Contemporary Art Summer School, Kitakyushu, Japan from 1987 to 1991. In 1988 he
was nominated for the Turner
Prize
and four years later won Glasgow’s Lord Provost Prize. He became a Royal
Academician in 1998. In 2000 he was
appointed
Professor of Sculpture at the Royal Academy Schools, London.
He
received an honorary Doctor of Laws from the University of Dundee in 2002. In
2003 his “Arm’s Length” sculpture of a woman made in coat hangers won The Jack
Goldhill Award for sculpture at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition. In 2004
he
was elected an honorary member of the Royal Scottish Academy and the same year,
the University of Dundee appointed
him
Professor of Inspiration and Discovery. From 2006-2010 he became a Trustee of
the National Portrait Gallery.
In
2011 Mach was awarded the Bank of Scotland Herald Angel Award for his
exhibition “Precious Light”, a daring contemporary
interpretation
of the King James Bible in the form of large-scale collage and sculpture. The
same year, he also won
the
Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Award for Art.
David
Mach currently works from his studio based in London.
CV
1956
Born in Methil, Fife (Scotland)
1974/79
Duncan of Jordanston College of Art, Dundee (Scotland)
1975
Pat Holmes Memorial Prize
1976
Duncan of Drumfork Travelling Scholarship
1977
SED minor travelling scholarship
1978
SED major travelling scholarship
1979/82
Royal College of Art (RCA), London.
1982
RCA Drawing Prize
1988
Nominated for the Turner Prize, Tate Gallery, London
1992
Won Lord Provost’s Award, RGI, Glasgow
1998
Elected Member of the Royal Academy of Arts
1999
Visiting Professor, Sculpture Department, Edinburgh College of Art
2000
Appointed Professor of Sculpture, Royal Academy Schools, London
2002
Honorary Doctor of Laws, University of Dundee University
2004
Made Honorary Member of the Royal Scottish Academy
First
Visiting Professor of Inspiration and Discovery at the University of Dundee (Scotland)
2006-2010
Elected to the board of the National Portrait Gallery
2011
Bank of Scotland Herald Angel Award 2011 winner for Precious Light
2011
Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Award for Art
BIOGRAPHY
2015 “Phantom”, commissioned by Morrisons Supermarkets, Scotland
2012 The Vinadio “Giants”, VIAPAC Project, Regione Piemonte, Italy
2002 Collage Portrait of Glasgow commissioned by the Museum of Modern Art,
Glasgow
2000 Unveiled “Good Guys, Bad Guys” & “Scamble”, sculptures
commissioned by Chesterfield Council, UK
1999 Installed “A National Portrait”, a 70m x 3m collage of Britain,
commissioned by the NMEC for the Self Portrait Zone of the Millennium Dome at
Greenwich, UK
1999 Unveiled “Big Heids”, three sculptures sited by the M8 motorway in
North Lanark, Scotland,
commissioned by North Lanark Council, UK
1998 Installed gargoyle sculpture commissioned by the town of Nicosia,
Cyprus
1997 Unveiled “Train”, Britain’s largest contemporary public sculpture in
Darlington, commissioned by
Darlington Council, Morrison Supermarkets and Northern Arts, UK
1997 Installed “It Takes Two”, on Circular Quay, Sydney, Australia, for
Sydney International Arts Festival
1996 “Urn”, commissioned for their collection by McMaster Museum of Art,
Hamilton, Ontario
1994 “Temple at Tyre”, Leith Docks, Edinburgh, commissioned by Edinburgh
City Council to support their bid to be City of Architecture and Design
1989 “Out of Order”, Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, commissioned by the
Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames