Edward powis jones

The remarkable artistic journey of Edward Powis Jones begins as an accomplished American painter living in Paris in the shadow of the Second World War and finishes as that of a strange and surprising photographer, whose work has no precedent. 

He employed all the disparate art mediums of his era and produced a life's work that is startlingly cohesive. After developing a passion of printmaking, he produced sculpture in bronze, wax, plaster and papier-mache. By the time of his death in New York in 1998, he had been treating photographic emulsion as painter's gesso for more than a decade and had become fascinated with the potential of the photocopier. 

His enormous artistic output springs both from an abiding affection for his family and from a deep sense of loss, with roots in the early death of his parents. Beneath the surface of his work lies something disconcerting, if not menacing. His conversion to Catholicism is reflected in his etchings of the Stations of the Cross and paintings of the Crucifixion. Yet despite the focus on morality, especially his own, his work also displays great joy and humanity. 

His final picture - including radical, large-scale painted photographs shot from a London hospital bed - show his ability to incorporate every aspect of his life into his unique artistic expression. Throughout his career Edward Powis Jones maintained a highly personal, singular artistic vision that admitted no consideration of compromise.

(From Edward Powis Jones, Faith, Hope Love, 2004)