Wolf Howard

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Being on the dole is like playing chess with Hitler by Wolf Howard
Being on the dole is like playing chess with Hitler by Wolf Howard

Wolf Howard (born April 7, 1968) is an artist, poet and filmmaker living in Chatham, Kent, England and was a founder member of the Stuckists art group. He is also a drummer who has played in garage and punk bands, including The Buff Medways, with Billy Childish.

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[edit] Life

Wolf Howard was born in Strood, Kent, England and attended Mid-Kent College for O-levels, where he "doesn't think he got any but always tells people he got two". In 1986 he began drumming, having taught himself, and has continued to do so ever since. From 1987 for 15 years he was on the dole, except for a total of two periods of two months, one day and half-an-hour, when he was respectively sweeping an ironmonger's warehouse floor, sweeping a neon light warehouse floor, picking apples and working in a frozen shepherds-pie factory. He decided against going to art college on the basis that it would "worsen himself". He lives in Chatham, where he works as a volunteer in an Oxfam shop.

[edit] Art

Firing Squad by Wolf Howard
Firing Squad by Wolf Howard

Howard is a long-time associate of Billy Childish and was one of the 13 original founder members of the Stuckists, a pro-figurative painting, anti-conceptual art group, co-founded by Childish and Charles Thomson in 1999. Howard exhibited widely with the group, most notably in their landmark exhibition The Stuckists Punk Victorian at the Walker Art Gallery, a part of the UK National Galleries group, for the 2004Liverpool Biennial. The exhibition was a definitive showing to date of the Stuckist oeuvre; Howard was one of the main "featured artists". He left the group in 2006 to pursue a solo career.

He paints bold figurative images in a simple, vigorous, impasto style. This has incurred criticism for its apparent naivety. Howard has stated that his finished result only comes about after hard work, which can involve scraping the paint back to the canvasa up to ten times. He has explained and defended a particular painting, Mrs Chippy:

"People have said do me, 'What’s the point in painting a cat? My five-year-old daughter could do that.' Yes, she could, but would it be a cat that had the look in its eyes that conveyed to you that it was about to be shot? That’s the fate that befell Mrs Chippy during one of the greatest survival adventures ever – Ernest Shackleton’s voyage to the Antarctic in 1914 on the ship Endurance - shown in the background of the painting , stuck in the ice, as the crew drag the small open boat which later accomplished an 850-mile rescue journey through sixty-foot waves.That’s the difference between my cat and a five-year-old’s."

He then added on the comment, "I also paint cats where there is no difference."

[edit] Pinhole photography

Pinhole photograph of Billy Childish by Wolf Howard
Pinhole photograph of Billy Childish by Wolf Howard

Wolf Howard is a member of the Stuckism Photography group and takes pinhole photographs. He uses a light-proof wooden box 4" square with a fixed-size pinhole in the front. Photographic paper is placed at the back of the box. There is no lens and no viewfinder, so he estimates the aim of the camera. A wooden slider allows light into the box for an exposure which is between 40 seconds and 5 minutes. The camera is placed inside a light-proof bag to replace the photographic paper.

He develops a negative print (in his bathroom) and makes the final positive print by placing another sheet of photographic paper under the negative with a 5 second exposure under a light bulb. The whole process requires estimation throughout and he "faces many disappointments in his darkroom. The hard work will eventually pay off."

He describes his motivation:

There is something special about a pinhole camera. There is a beauty in its simplicity and rawness that technology has not been able to better. There is a timeless quality that can make the most uncomplicated subject seem full of poetry.

In each pinhole picture I take I hope to capture the joy and excitement that the early pioneering photographers (Fox Talbot and friends) must have felt when they took and developed photographs for the very first time.[1]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Katherine Evans, ed. (2000), The Stuckists Victoria Press, ISBN 0-907165-27-3
  • Frank Milner, ed. (2004), The Stuckists Punk Victorian National Museums Liverpool, ISBN 1-902700-27-9

[edit] External links