This, London-based painter Sarah Medway's second publication from Anomie
Publishing, is devoted to the subject of the River Thames. The
publication presents a series of twenty-eight oil paintings created in
Medway's canal-side studio in central London during the Covid-19
lockdowns of 2020-21.
An introductory text by critic and writer Sue Hubbard takes readers
through the series, exploring how the paintings engage with the
qualities and complexities of the river to represent all manner of
concepts, experiences, and emotions, from a yearning for lost freedoms
to roam the city during the pandemic to evocations of the subterranean
waterways that form part of the city's mythology. Like a flâneuse,
Medway follows the river across the city, spanning the seasons, in
various weather, light, and atmospheric conditions, at different
times.
The Thames is beautiful, terrifying, powerful, alluring, and dangerous.
Medway captures the river's eclectic dynamics, rhythms and energy
through the language of abstract painting, the ripples, bubbles, eddies
and currents, the reflections and refractions denoted through sinuous
lines, ellipses and spots, dots and loops, flecks and swirls.
Referencing twentieth-century modernist movements such as De Stijl,
Tachisme and post-war American Abstract Expressionism, Medway's own,
lyrical, often graphic approach to painting the Thames results in a
vivid interplay between pattern and color. The paintings have overt
musical resonances--tempo, rhythm, and dynamics as might be encountered
in an orchestral score. Like the river, the paintings are at times
joyous and playful, at other times brooding and menacing, yet always
moving, in flux, traveling onwards towards the sea.
An in-conversation between Medway and writer, editor, and curator Anna
McNay provides insight into the artist's life and work, discussing the
processes by which Medway makes her paintings and the thinking behind
them. Speaking to McNay, Medway asserts: "Water has always flooded the
abstract language in my work. Not just the sea, but lakes, ponds,
canals, dykes and rivers. The myriad and multiple reflections on water,
during daylight or at night, have always been present in my
paintings."
Designed and produced by Peter B. Willberg, this foil-blocked,
cloth-bound hardback publication with a special dustjacket also features
an illustrated chronology documenting Medway's life and career.