The Years Of Endurance 1793-1802

Artist

Year

Ben McLaughlin

2025

Dimensions

Medium

20 x 30 cm

Oil on panel


About the artwork

SOLD - “Originally a tiny photograph in a pocket guide to Budapest from the late 1950s. I have no connection to Budapest, I liked the image - it made me think of my parents being young at the same time. The restaurant looked like a nice place to be, but Hungary then, I imagine was not necessarily. History does loom large in a lot of my work, whether it’s visible or not.

I like small or poor quality pictures to work from -details have to be ignored or invented, denying any easy route to a dull, straightforward copy of a photograph. It can be hard work though.”



About the artist

Ben McLaughlin

Ben McLaughlin (London, 1969) completed his Bachelor of Fine Arts at Central St. Martin's School of Art in 1993, followed by a Masters in Printmaking at Camberwell College of Art. In 1992, he won first prize at the Falkiners Fine Paper Young Artists Award, the Cohn & Wolfe Young Artist Competition in London, and the Cecil Collins Memorial Award for Drawing, also in London. In 1994 and 1996, Ben received first prize for the Médaille d'Honneur de la Ville de Salies-de-Béarn in France. In 2005, he was awarded a prestigious artist residency at the Joseph and Anni Albers Foundation in Connecticut, United States. Ben's work has been exhibited throughout Europe and the United States.

His paintings are imbued with nostalgia, intimacy, and emotion, shaped by a wide range of influences and complex iconography drawn from film, photography, and literature.His compositions appear fragmented through cropping and the choice of surprising viewpoints. His enchanting, poetic work is indebted to artists such as Hopper, Whistler, and Winslow Homer. The paintings embody the perfection of imperfection; atypically composed panels, sometimes an expression of an incomplete memory. Images that are often typical of a specific generation or a moment in time. The titles of the works themselves are often borrowed from newspapers, radio, crossword puzzles, and other surprising sources. Unexpected and sometimes comical, these references give the panels a mysterious twist. Something Ben himself likes to call a sense of 'disconnect'.