"BOLDLY GLOWING" Text by Jan Patience, featured in HOMES & INTERIORS SCOTLAND MAGAZINE Issue 57

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"BOLDLY GLOWING" Text by Jan Patience, featured in HOMES & INTERIORS SCOTLAND MAGAZINE Issue 57

"BOLDLY GLOWING" Text by Jan Patience, featured in HOMES & INTERIORS SCOTLAND MAGAZINE Issue 57

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Glasgow School of Art rejected him twice, but determination, hard graft and
a burning desire to follow in Turner's footsteps have made Frank To more than
just one to watch.




Text by Jan Patience



If I was trained in matters of the mind, which I'm not, I'd say it was
obvious what attracts people to Frank To's work and why, at the comparatively
tender age of 25, he has attracted such a lot of attention at home, in London
and in New York, where he already has an agent.



In April last year, Homes & Interiors Scotland selected Glasgow- based
Frank as one of five young artists to watch and, in the intervening 18 months,
demand for his paintings has soared, with a painting which would have cost £800
this time last year now sporting a £1700 price tag.



Aside from several not- so- famous notable collectors, the Shakespearian actor
Patrick Stewart, best- known for his roles in Star Trek and X- Men, is a fan of
his work, having first spotted him as a promising art student at the University
of Huddersfield, where Frank completed his degree in Fine Art and Stewart is
still Chancellor.



Stewart contacted To by email a year later, when he was studying for a Masters
at Dundee's Duncan of Jordanstone college, to say he wanted to buy one of his
paintings. "I thought it was one of my friends playing a joke",
he laughs. "I actually went online to find his official fan website and
sent an email to his office asking if it was a hoax. But it wasn't. Patrick now
has several of my paintings and I've been down to visit him at his house in
London, where he has an amazing art collection"
.

It is easy to see why an actor of the calibre of Stewart would be drawn to a
Frank To painting. There is drama in a Frank To painting. A brooding mental
energy that sucks you in and leaves you wondering what, why, where? There is
always something or someone or even part of someone emerging from the depths of
one of his paintings. This is probably because this engaging, highly focused
artist stirs himself into the work in a way that many of his peers- of all
ages- do not.



In putting himself into the work, the viewers put themselves into it, which
offers them a reassuring connection with the painting. When he talks about how
his hero Michelangelo considered marble for days on end before he teased out
the figure within, setting it free from its solid mass, it sounds plausible
when he explains that this is his preferred method of working, too. Frank's
modus operandi is to create in the first instance an abstract work which is a
painting in its own right. He works quickly, layering the paint and fizzing his
own energy on to the canvas in great sweeping gestures. This is the conceptual
part of the To artistic process.



It continues when he drips turpentine on the surface to create a mottled
textured layer and then uses whatever he has to hand- be a discarded neon light
strip or whatever- to work the surface into a state of readiness.



It is only at that point that Frank steps back, furrows his brow and looks for
the figure within the canvas. His figures or body parts are drafted in with a
rag soaked in turpentine and this is the traditionalist part of the process,
for (despite the unconventional tool), Frank is a fine draughtsman, having
spent long hours sitting in galleries round Europe sketching works of the Old
Masters.



One of his most prized possessions is a well- thumbed leather notebook with
incredibly detailed handwritten sketches and notes taken during a four- month
spell travelling in Europe and talking to artists he met along the way.



He says: "I just disappeared for four months after I left Huddersfield
University. I was recovering from a broken relationship and none of my family
or friends knew where I went, but I see the trip now as an important stage in
my artistic development."




Many of Frank's figures pay homage to the likes of Michelangelo and Leonardo Da
Vinci. He is also a prodigious reader and soaks up influence from all
directions from the Geek philosophers to Dante and his box- like yet perfectly
ordered studio in the W.A.S.P.S building in Dennistoun, Glasgow, is packed with
books all description.



This sense of order is important to Frank To. "If you look around,"
he explains, "you'll see this is where I paint, this is where I keep my
books, this is where I display work and this is my office area. I think it's
important to approach being a professional artist in this way."




One of the most sensitive pieces in his studio when we meet in late November is
a painting destined for his forth- coming show at the Queen's Gallery, Dundee
entitled Time After Time, in which two clothed figures stand facing each other
with a considerable gap between them. They are clad in medieval costume and, as
is usual in one of Frank's paintings, theirs features obscured.



"This came out of a personal experience I had of having feelings for
someone which were never realised although, as you probably pick up, there is a
sense of 'what if?'"




It is this ability to place great depths of feeling within a painting that has
won him many admirers in the three short years he has been working as a
professional artist.



Incredibly, given his popularity, Frank was rejected by Glasgow School of Art
twice. The first time was when he left school and the second time, when he
applied to do a Masters after completing his degree at Huddersfield.



Happily he pitched up in Dundee, which has an international reputation for
painting and suited him down the ground. "By the time I got to Dundee, I was
thinking of myself as an artist,"
he explains. "My year out
after leaving Huddersfield was my true education.



"Dundee is renowned for the painting side of things. I had heard it was
rated beside the Royal College in London and I knew many of the artists who had
come from there by reputation. By chance I was teamed up with the artist Calum
Colvin as my tutor, which was a bit overwhelming at first to be honest. It was
great for me. Calum thought I had the practical experience, but felt I lacked
confidence.



"He instilled in me the need to be professional and the way he presented
himself was a huge influence on me. At Huddersfield, the approach was very
conceptual and it taught me how to think. In the years since then, I have
learned how to paint."




Frank's work was picked up on quickly after he left Dundee, with all but one of
the works in his degree show selling at London's Affordable Art Fair. "After
my success there, I felt confident about approaching galleries. I felt I had an
original concept and it seemed to work,"
he says. "I also
received help in the shape of a grant from the Prince's Scottish Youth Business
Trust. I asked myself what would be the point of all that studying if I wasn't
going to give it a go and become a full- time painter,"
he reflects.



He attributes his family background - his Chinese- born parents were in the
catering trade - to instilling in him a sense of making his chosen career work
for him. Today, just two years on from leaving college, Frank is making real
in- roads into his ambitions, chief among which is the desire to be made a
member of the Royal Academy by the time he is 30. "Turner was admitted
by the time he was my age, so I won't be the youngest ever, but that is a real
burning desire of mine,"
he admits.



As well as being represented by the notable Albemarle Gallery in London, he is
also moving towards making an impression in America, following in the footsteps
of eminent Scots artists such as the Scottish Colourists and the so- called New
Glasgow Boys.



A collector of his work put him in touch with New York agent Michel Witmer who
had admired a painting of his when he visited her home. "He represents
mainly dead artists like Andy Warhol,"
To says with a laugh.



"I went over to New York, with a painting under my arm to meet him,
which was a challenge when it came to Customs, and he now represents me over
there."
His next exhibition in Scotland is a mixed show at the Queen's
Gallery in Dundee, starting on January 26. As well as armfuls of talent, To is
a resourceful young man, who knows he has to stay focus to stay ahead of the
game.

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