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Matt McCormick is a multimedia artist renowned for his contemporary take on the iconography of the American West. Sampling from the conflicted histories and disproportion of wealth of his hometown in Los Angeles and the wider aesthetic of the California landscape, McCormick mines the nostalgia of a faded utopia that was the American dream. Through a combination of painting, works on paper, sculpture, and installation, the artist investigates his generation’s lack of social mobility and the crippling debt inherited from the mismanagement of global wealth.
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In Into the Distances - a series that began in 2016 - the artist overlays intricate charcoal drawings of cowboys against prints of American Western desert scape. McCormick photographs the ubiquitous desert scenes and prints these directly onto the paper which are digitally manipulated into a series of surrealist tableaus. The cowboy is a rich symbol in American culture - one that embodies adventure, self-reliance, and rugged individuality. He is instantly recognisable wearing boots, spurs, and Stetson hat. In Somewhere Between Right And Wrong, two mounted cowboys sit in an augmented pink desert landscape, going about their work in an unknowable journey. By reconstituting this symbol onto a contemporary stage, the figure works to typify the unattainability and futility of the American dream. The cowboy acts as a proxy to the now defunct sense of obtainable achievement pervasive in the generations following the Second World War.
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