Fox is a multidisciplinary artist working across painting, drawing, sculpture, installation, printmaking, writing and digital form. His practice tests material under pressure…how form bends, fractures, or slips into another state.
In my recent work—floor piece installations, mesh wall drawings, and sutures—I have moved away from the heroic gesture and the artist as performer. I set conditions and allow gravity, tension, and containment to act. The materials are placed under pressure and allowed to respond.
The work makes no claim to permanence. It embraces temporality and ephemerality. Installations are temporary by design and are shaped by the specific space in which they are placed.
The sutures function as triage—urgent repair. They do not conceal rupture or restore wholeness. They bind what might otherwise split apart. The work holds tension rather than resolves it.
Materials Under Pressure
I place materials under pressure and observe the result. Tar paper, mesh, Mylar, paint skins, wood, staples, and wire are subjected to gravity, fastening, incision, compression, and containment. Form is not designed in advance; it emerges as a consequence of stress and contact.
These works abandon pictorial illusion in favor of physical tension. They are less images than events—records of force acting on matter, and matter pushing back. In turn, the room itself comes under pressure.
Materials Under Pressure
I place materials under pressure and observe the result. Tar paper, mesh, Mylar, paint skins, wood, staples, and wire are subjected to gravity, fastening, incision, compression, and containment. Form is not designed in advance; it emerges as a consequence of stress and contact.
These works abandon pictorial illusion in favor of physical tension. They are less images than events—records of force acting on matter, and matter pushing back. In turn, the room itself comes under pressure.