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Programme 1: Chad McCail - Every picture tells
a story
Background Information
Chad McCail was born Manchester in 1961. He studied at
University of Kent and Goldsmiths College. His detailed drawings
remind us of illustrations in schoolbooks. The fictional
environments present a harmonious picture of human interaction that
defies our knowledge of the chaotic world we inhabit. The
narratives contained within each picture are didactically spelt out
by captions, suggesting the artist as an agent for social
change.
Chad had no notion of becoming an artist when he was a child
growing up in Edinburgh. He wasn’t particularly artistic and
took no kind of art qualification at school. He was 23 and had just
completed an English degree when he first had the notion of art as
a career, and that was only due to its apparent pulling power.
It was not until he started to make a living from his artwork
about five years ago, that he felt comfortable calling himself an
artist. After graduating, he would do art in his spare time,
attempting to break onto the scene whilst supporting himself with a
variety of jobs he didn’t enjoy. The major turning points in
his life have been going to art college, being accepted to the MA
course at Goldsmith’s in London and getting a dealer to
distribute his work.
Friends influence him a great deal as well as other artists. He
reads a lot, including science fiction and psychoanalysis, but he
avoids mass media – he does not own a television and only
listens to the radio at six o’clock every night to hear the
news.
In contrast to Chad’s relative distance from everyday
life, he has developed his artistic style with the specific
function of reaching as large an audience as possible. He always
wanted his work to be on public display outdoors. For that reason,
he started to work in black and white – as these colours can
be photocopied most easily – and he worked on paper making
work that can go through a photocopier and be blown up or shrunk
depending on the desired effect. His work is a natural progression
from these logistics. He tends to draw images that stand up to
scrutiny when blown up. He believes that art has a public function
as it can say so much and therefore should not be confined to
galleries which have very limited audiences.
Chad makes art designed to make people think about certain
issues, and as his ideas have developed, his work has too. He feels
that the messages are now more direct and readable and that he
draws with more clarity than he used to. He describes his style as
polemical and poster-like. His pieces are, in effect,
propaganda.
Chad is motivated to make work by certain issues – if he
feels strongly about something, if something irritates him, he
responds to it through his work. He likes the idea of destroying an
idea through the statements made in his work. He looks for a form
to represent his subject and then a way to express his feelings and
then goes ahead with the process of making and then displaying to
the public.
© 2000 Channel Four Television
Corporation
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