LOCATION: The Bottle Factory, 12 Ossory Road, London, SE1 5AN
4 OCTOBER - 16 NOVEMBER
Open Thursday - Saturday, 12pm - 6pm
Exceptionally closed on Thursday 31 October
If you would like to visit outside of these hours please book an appointment via email: info@ohshprojects.com
VEIL, a solo exhibition by Justin Mortimer, brings together three distinct series by Mortimer for the first time: Pelt, Kammer, and the Zone suite, each exploring themes of absence, the human form, and the unsettling nature of post-event remnants.
In Pelt, Mortimer portrays abandoned clothes as stand-ins for missing people, evoking the aftermath of displacement, echoing his long-standing fascination with the dispossessed. Kammer features digital glitches and fractured plasma screens, acting as metaphors for psychological isolation and a distorted relationship with reality. The Zone suite reflects Mortimer’s return to drawing, creating spontaneous, narrative-rich compositions that contrast with the control required in large-scale painting.
A common thread throughout the exhibition is Mortimer’s depiction of the human form, particularly the nude, which he sees as a way to explore vulnerability, the physicality of the body, and personal anxieties. His works convey a sense of instability and imbalance, often obscuring faces or bodies to heighten the sense of mystery and tension. The title VEIL aligns with this theme of concealment, emphasizing the hidden or unsaid, and the collision of disparate elements to evoke a deeper, often unsettling narrative.
For full catalogue of works and pricing please email: info@ohshprojects.com
Ahead of VEIL, OHSH Projects sat down with Mortimer at his studio on New Kent Road to discuss the three series of works that this exhibition gathers together, the themes running through Mortimer’s oeuvre, and the influence his early life experience has had on his practice.
EXTRACT:
JM: Well, I’ve been painting these subjects for twenty years, the dispossessed, the outsiders, the people that have been uprooted and trying to find their space in some desolate place after some event. And I’ve been obsessed with that, forever really. I’m not sure why, but I suppose it’s an empathy as well, I suppose. Because I’m painting what I’m scared of as I might have mentioned before. So there’s an empathy for the people who are uprooted like this...
OHSH: The aftermath of battle.
JM: Yeah, within the banality of just a child’s t -shirt.