Showing posts with label Michelangelo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michelangelo. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 April 2010

ME AND MY... MENTOR by Marianne Halavage, THE SUNDAY HERALD March 7th 2010



Interviews by Marianne Halavage

Photograph by Gordon Terris

How a promising young artist found friendship- and discovered the patience he needed to realise his talent

FRANK TO, 27, ARTIST

I paint fine art, both figurative and abstract. But I prefer abstract for being able to portray myself- and my dark side. I have this dual "nice guy, dark guy" persona, a bit like Bruce Wayne, who turns into Batman. But, like Bruce Wayne, I keep my dark side close and channel it in my work.

At secondary school, I realised I had a bit of a talent for art but that's not why I produced it. I was this skinny, geeky teenager and I figured the only way I could attract girls was to do portraits of them. Did it work? Did it heck. They thought I was a Van Gogh- type weirdo. Actually, I tried to ignore my talent. But at every step- standard grade art, higher art, art school, my career as an artist- I was drawn to it and chose it at the last minute. So now I say, "I didn't choose art. It chose me."

In 2004 I did a masters in Fine Art at Duncan of Jordanstone Art College in Dundee and was taught by Philip Braham. I remember back then, going to the opening of his show at the Scottish Gallery, seeing his work and thinking, "I want to be that good". Now even though I've graduated and I'm a "minor celebrity" in the art world, I still consider Philip as the master and me as the apprentice.

Philip has a great technique, but he also has a great mind for painting. In 2004, I was a very irrational and impatient painter. Phil infused me with patience and rationality. He used to say to me, "Those oil paints don't control you, you control them."

My most famous buyer is the actor Patrick Stewart, who is also the chancellor of Huddersfield University where I studied fine art. I met him before my degree show, and a year later I received an email from him. At first I thought someone was playing a hoax. He bought some of my stuff and we've been friends ever since. When Patrick acts, he portrays his own voice. When I paint, I portray my own voice, and people recognise my work as Frank To's, no one else's.

www.franktofineart.com

PHILIP BRAHAM, 50, ARTIST

Frank's enthusiasm, determination and personal vitality come through in his brush work. He's a very good painter, as well as very good publicising his work. Some of the most talented students disappear after college, but Frank has the confidence to get his name out there.

I suppose when I was starting out I also had that boldness. In 1985, a friend and I held a protest outside the RSA because the Edinburgh Festival was not showing contemporary Scottish art. Our protest led to a blockbuster exhibition at the 1987 festival. That exhibition not only made my name as an artist.

My gift for art was obvious from a young age. At five, when other children were drawing stick figures, I was drawing solid volumes and trying to shade them in. In 1980, I won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Fine Art in The Hague. There, I was inspired by Piet Mondrian's early work on landscapes.

Now, I try to represent a landscape as precisely as I can, while giving a flavour of the events in history that took place there. One landscape might take six months.

I began teaching 10 years ago, and though it slows down the number of paintings I can produce, the quality of my work benefits from my tutoring. Sometimes, I can even hear my own voice as tutor over my shoulder.

I have many big- name collectors but I don't like to say who. The work shouldn't need the nod from a celebrity. But Frank is at a different stage in his career and it's part of his marketing strategy, so I won't be too critical. Frank is in the phase where he must work hard at doing and publicising his art. But, in five years, when he is able to relax, his celebrity buyers won't be the first thing he is proud of.

www.philipbraham.com

Frank To is exhibiting at the Glasgow Art Fair. March 25- 28 (www.glasgowartfair.com)

Interviews by Marianne Halavage

Photograph by Gordon Terris

Friday, 16 April 2010

ARTIST FINALLY HONOURED IN OWN COUNTRY by Mark Smith, SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY October 4th 2009




HE IS the rising star of Scottish art with paintings that now sell for up to £10,000 each.

But Frank To has revealed for the first time how racism and bullying took him to the brink of suicide and rejection by the country's most prestigious art college forced him to leave his native country.

Grangemouth-born To was turned down for a place at Glasgow School of Art when he was a teenager.

This weekend, the 26-year-old artist was back in Glasgow to give his first public demonstration of the techniques that are making his reputation.

He said: "I love Scotland and am proud to be called a Scottish artist. But sometimes you have to leave Scotland before you can get a chance.

"I know that I had to leave Scotland or I would have really struggled.

"I've never talked about this before, but I was rejected by the Glasgow School of Art when I was younger.

"That was very upsetting at the time, and I doubted whether I was up to the job. I'm just a wee lad from Grangemouth, and sometimes you think you are out of your depth in the art world. When Glasgow knocked me back I was pretty gutted."

The Scots-Chinese artist left Scotland and took a place studying art in Huddersfield, in Yorkshire. His painting style involves teasing human forms out of blobs of paint on the canvas, using unusual tools such as toothbrushes.

To said his early life was also scarred by constant bullying at a new school in Glasgow, where he moved with his mother, Winnie, after his parents divorced.

"Life at school was terrible," he said. "I had an artistic outlook, and that didn't go down well at school. I was already badly shaken by my parents' divorce, then the move to Glasgow was also a big change.

"I was badly bullied. Sometimes it was racist because of my Chinese background. Most of the time it was just because I was different. It got so bad that I considered suicide. But painting helped me cope."

It was during his degree show at Huddersfield that To's work first came to prominence. The university's chancellor at the time was the actor Patrick Stewart, famous as Captain Jean-Luc Picard in the Star Trek films but also hailed as one of the country's finest stage actors. Stewart is now his biggest fan, championing his work around the globe.

To said: "Having somebody like Patrick behind me is a great thing. He not only backs me as an artist, he's also been mentoring me on how to present myself, how to be more confident."

Stewart said: "I think he's very gifted, and I'm delighted he's beginning to get an international audience. He's adventurous and bold, and not afraid of a big canvas."

Peter McGlone, owner of The Queen's Gallery in Dundee, described To as "one of the next big things."

He said: "Frank already has an international following, and his paintings are selling quickly in London and New York. Prices are soaring, and will continue to do so."

This year, To has become one of the youngest painters ever to have his work exhibited at the Albemarle Gallery in London, one of the art world's most prestigious venues. He is also being represented by the New York art dealer, Michel Witmer.

To has now returned to Scotland to live and is at last receiving praise for his work in his home country.

He said: "I don't feel bitter that I was rejected by Glasgow. I like to think I'm too mature to stick two fingers up to them and say, here I am, I've made it."

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist.

Monday, 4 May 2009

FRANK GOES WHERE NO ARTIST HAS GONE BEFORE IN ROMAN PORTRAIT by Hazel Mollison, The Edinburgh Evening News, 17/04/09

Patrick Stewart hails image as it goes on display in Capital

Patrick Stewart hails image as it goes on display in Capital

HE has boldly gone where no artist has gone before.

Frank To created a striking image of actor Patrick Stewart, aka Star Trek Captain Jean-Luc Picard, in the style of a Roman emperor.

And when the artist showed it to the man himself at a gallery in Leith, the 68-year-old Stewart - currently in the Capital performing in Waiting for Godot at the King's Theatre - gave it his seal of approval.

The actor became friends with the young artist when Mr To was a student and he was chancellor of Huddersfield University.

Stewart admired his work at a graduate exhibition and bought two pictures. Since then, he has eagerly followed his career and was happy to sit for a portrait.

His profile, in red and orange colours, is one of the eye-catching paintings now on display at the Leith Gallery, on The Shore.

Stewart said: "For me, it was especially gratifying to find a student whose work was so exciting and fresh. Since then, I've got to know him and keep abreast of his exhibitions. I've got pictures by him in both my homes. I'm very impressed by his latest work. It's very different from his earlier pictures, which were very abstract."

He said he has enjoyed returning to Edinburgh for the first time in more than a decade. He is performing until tomorrow in the sell-out production, opposite his X-Men co-star Sir Ian McKellen.

He said: "I'm here with my girlfriend this time, and we've had time to be tourists. We've loved it - I wish I could stay longer.

"It's such a beautiful city and unlike anywhere else. I'm a fan of architecture and I've enjoyed walking up streets and looking at all the details on old buildings. We also enjoyed the Turner and Italy exhibition.

"We've had a wonderful welcome, with full houses every night. One of the most charming things is, in every city, we've used local young actors. We've really enjoyed working with them."

Mr To, 26, who is originally from Falkirk, said Stewart's interest and encouragement had been a huge morale boost.

He is already making a name for himself as a figurative artist, with exhibitions in Edinburgh, Glasgow and London. His work has also featured on STV's Rebus.

He said: "I met Patrick by chance when he came to my degree show. I was very surprised.

"It's been nice to have someone like that support me and believe in me. It was a massive boost."

He said he had been inspired by depictions of kings and emperors on ancient coins when painting the portrait. He said: "I was thinking about art and propaganda, and why they put the head of the monarch on to coins. Patrick acted in Anthony and Cleopatra, and that inspired the idea."

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist.

Friday, 1 May 2009

GALLERY ROUND-UP, The Herald April 11th 2009



The Leith Gallery

65 The Shore

0131 553 5255

www.the-leith-gallery.co.uk

Mon- Fri 11am- 5pm;

Sat 11am- 4pm

Until April 25

The Leith Gallery in Edinburgh has always had a policy of promoting young artists, and its annual Faces exhibition features the cream of Scotland's art school graduates. Graham Flack was one of the featured artists in 2001, while Frank To exhibited there in 2006.

Flack, whose work reveals a fascination with the human head and the space around it, was born in Northern Ireland and studied at Edinburgh College of Art. He won third prize in the BP Portrait Award in 2003 and was one of four shortlisted artists for the Aspect Prize in 2007. He has been recommended as one of the ‘Top 20 of Scottish Art' new and old to invest in, and his work is in many collections including The Scottish Office, Edinburgh College of Art and that of actor Robert Carlyle.

At just 26, Frank To has garned himself an impressive reputation with his psychologically intense studies of the human form teased out of an abstract background. His most famous collector is the actor Patrick Stewart. To has produced a powerful study of Stewart's head specially for this exhibition.

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

TO BE FRANK by Ann Russell, The Whit? Issue 2, Glasgow Aye Pullout Magazine 05/03/09



A chattering Frank To welcomes me into his immaculate studio, laughs at my surprise and remarks, "The state of your room affects the state of your mind" a motto reflected in his shiny loafers and spotless denim. I settle into an inviting couch while To (pronounced Tow) makes us some tea in the shadow of a large paint spattered canvas.

He is of Chinese origin but was born and brought up in the east end of Glasgow. The 26- year- old returned to his native Scottish city after a spell of what he calls ‘self imposed exile'. He graduated from the University of Huddersfield with a BA (Hons) in Fine Art and went on to gain a Masters of Fine Art from Duncan of Jordanstone Art College where he was taught by leading contemporary artist Calum Colvin.

BREAK- UP

I ask where his artistic journey began. "My girlfriend broke up with me and I felt like I had to get away. I took a year off from my BA and went to Europe to immerse myself in the work of the old masters. During this time I began to appreciate sculpture. I read a book by Giorgio Vasari called ‘The Lives of the Artists'. It said Michelangelo would sit and stare at a solid form for hours at a time. He sought to free his figures from their marble present." He smiles contentedly. "I was so inspired by this technique that I adapted it to suit my own work and it was then that I began to tweak figures out of my paintings."

To shifts in his chair, leans to one side, sighs briefly and lowers his voice as if sharing a secret. "In the first and second years of my degree, I was out drinking, partying and chasing girls. In third year my girlfriend broke up with me and my mum was diagnosed with cancer. From then on I became completely focused".

CELEB FANS

The young contemporary painter has received extensive commendation for his innovative style which has attracted a loyal celebrity following including Star Trek legend Patrick Stewart and Doctor Who Star, David Tennant. Stewart first bought To's work in 2006. To admit being ‘star struck' at the time but now regards the actor as "a great friend and mentor".

To modestly plays down his success and seems slightly baffled by the acclaim that surrounds his work. "I'm not naturally talented. I've just worked my a**e off". He pauses, looks pensive, then adds: "I had a lack of confidence in my work for a long time. As a teenager I was picked on quite severely and at school I think they associated art with being weak". Far from defeated the ever resourceful To has big plans, he intends to use the economic downturn to his advantage. His advice (unsurprisely) is for the public to purchase art, however, the logic behind this assertion seems to make sense. "People have a fear of the current economic climate. I would advise them to look to art as a form of investment. It has a mid to long term value and in general paintings accumulate worth as they get older". He adds: "There is no point being down in the dumps when I could create something that inspire people."

GOOD EXAMPLES

I want to provide an example of hope by working hard and doing well during the recession. Tracy Emin and Damien Hirst worked hard during the last recession in the early 1990s and look at them now. I think my business skills will help me through".

To's business suggestions are not to be sniffed at. He won the Prince's Scottish Youth Business Trust (PSYBT) regional business award last year and is regularly praised for his entrepreneurial skills, admitting his choice to study at the University of Huddersfield was influenced by the opportunity to take art related business modules;

"At Huddersfield they combined a business element into the course which made it stand out from others I looked at. I needed a new challenge and desperately wanted to get out of Glasgow. I watched a documentary on the singer Sting one night. He said he left Newcastle because he used to see ships being built at the docks, for months he watched them until they eventually set sail, never to be seen again. It made me think of the Clyde and it strengthened my resolve to see new things."

To confesses that his adventurous spirit is a reaction to his ‘restricted upbringing'. He refers to his childhood with a wan smile, as if trials of the past have shaped the man he is today: "I had a fairly restricted upbringing being of Chinese origin and attended a Catholic school." He tells me: "I wanted to get away from these traditions. I am very accepting of all religions and ethnicities but I don't believe that children should have beliefs forced upon them. Before I went to university I had never interacted with a gay person before because at school we were led to believe that it was some sort of forbidden taboo. I soon learned that was bulls**t and they are just normal human beings like the rest of us. It annoys me when people judge something they know nothing about."

"My mum wasn't pleased when I said I wanted to be an artist. I think she hoped I would do something more academic. On my first night travelling I was in Copenhagen. I slept rough and washed in a cafe toilet. I guess that is how people see artists sometimes. They are generally looked down upon. But the more success I achieve the more people realise that I'm doing something worthwhile."

To shrugs then confesses that his run of luck has infact been intertwined with a handful of bad decisions. At least he's human. "One of the biggest mistakes I made was the misconception that I was going to get ‘discovered' at my degree show. This is the biggest trap of all and one that many art students fall in to. If I could go back in time I would make myself learn the colour wheel. Can you believe I didn't know that till I went to university?" he sniggers "I'd say ‘Don't be so arrogant. Be humble, fix that awful fashion sense and don't fall in love so easily'". Hindsight is a wonderful thing but To doesn't need to dwell on regrets. His perseverance has led to representation being secured with top agents in London and New York, proof that an inspirational forward thinking attitude can turn the boy from Glasgow into a global success.

Unlike his fellow students To was actively sending his work to galleries whilst on his Masters course. His proactively led to an offer from the Fairfax Contemporary Art Gallery in London to show his masters collection at the Affordable Art Fair, the showcase for contemporary art priced at under £3000. After To's success at the fair, other galleries began to take interest in his paintings: "In my first year as a working artist I had over 30 exhibitions, it was suicidal but it got my name out there. Now, as I become more widely recognized I can pick and choose galleries I exhibit at, I plan to do round 3 or 4 exhibitions this year"

To's paintings now sell for anything from £500 for a small print to £10,000 for a large canvas. "Some artists think that having business skills is selling out and that we should all be bohemians with tormented souls and paint splattered clothes but when those guys are working in Tesco and I have become a leading Scottish artist, I can walk past and say ‘I told you so'"

His recent place at number 12 in the Scotland on Sunday ‘top 100 hot Scots' suggests he is already a leading man in the eligibility stakes. The mention of his nomination makes him chuckle: "Yeah I had some explaining to do to my girlfriend when that came out. I didn't think it was a big deal but then I had a few weird offers on Valentine's Day. I had to laugh". The young draughtsman is relaxed and confident around his work. He is technically brilliant, manipulating paint and chemicals to create life forms that glow with a mesmerizing spiritual force. He keeps his profession close to his chest as if protecting something precious. I can't help thinking there is an eccentric side to the polished To that only his paintings get to see: "Nobody knows I'm an artist until I tell them. I just look like a normal guy. I live by a very important business rule "Don't show your real self until it is necessary".

Saturday, 21 March 2009

ARTIST FOR SALE by Leah Parker, Home Plus Scotland March- April 2009




We've grabbed contemporary figurative painter Frank To and made him justify what would make us bust our budget to bag him. Offers over, anyone?

Frank To was born in Glasgow in 1982. Having graduated from the University of Huddersfield with BA (Hons) Fine Art, he went on to gain a Masters of Fine Art from Duncan of Jordanstone Art College. Frank works from his studio in Glasgow and has exhibited alongside some of the greats of the Scottish and international art scene such as Peter Howson and Damien Hirst. Star Trek legend Patrick Stewart is a huge fan of To's work and classes the artist as a friend.

Inspiring views...
I have always been inspired by personal life experiences, both good and bad. I feel that by using these allows the art work to become more personal to me and the viewers. Also it allows the audience to relate to the work more. It's these experiences that make life worth living.

Compact and bijou... I'm currently working on a new body of work for my exhibition, "Boundaries", at the Leith Gallery in April. I've also just finished a series of paintings for the Albemarle Gallery in London. Most of the new paintings have an underlying visual theme of a human figure emerging out from the darkness, refusing to be suppressed. It's only been during the past year that there has been more of an appreciation and demand for my darker pieces. I suppose they reflect more on my personality.

Recently refurbished...
I moved into a bigger studio in Spring 2008, but I have only just finished refurbishing the room .I'm quite specific about the area where I create my work. I managed to get this beautiful old cherry wood study desk for the studio. Now I feel more comfortable and professional about my workspace.

Scope for development...
The recent turmoil in the financial market has led a rise in demand for alternative investments such as fine wine and whisky. I think that in the current climate, fine art offers more of an attractive alternative investment. Depending on the artist, the value of art rarely falls over the medium to long term. Despite this, I still highly advise people to only buy artworks that they enjoy.


Benefits from...
I work quite closely with P.S.Y.B.T (Prince's Scottish Youth Business Trust). As a past P.S.Y.B.T supported client, I received an enormous amount of moral and financial support from the charity. Byworking with them, I can help promote the support and advice they can offer to young aspiring Scottish artists.

Much potential... In my spare time I work on abstract paintings. These are very expressive and highly emotional pieces. What I'm trying to portray is the dark side of my personality. The only way I can engage fully is by using method acting; a form of acting where the actor tries to replicate real life emotional conditions of the character. I'm also doing some personal research on Carl Jung's theory of the Shadow Side in the human mind. I just find the whole topic fascinating.

Original features... I enjoyed art when I was younger, but never really aspired to be an artist. I had a difficult time at home and school when I was a teenager. By the time I was 17 the whole ordeal left me depressed and eventually I was admitted to psychotherapy. Although I was getting help, art became an outlet for my problems. Eventually thanks to art school and actor friend, Patrick Stewart, it is now my "voice" in the world.
Desirable location... Whenever I'm in London, I stay in a beautiful Victorian three storey house. The area has such a diverse culture, history and scenery. Whenever I wake up in that house, I feel as though I'm living in late 19th century London.

Immaculately presented... I'm getting more attention for my unusual painting technique. It's inspired by the Renaissance sculptor, Michelangelo. It was said that Michelangelo could visualize the human form within a block of marble. Similarly, I tease out figures from initial abstract paintings.


Particulars.....

Favourite building... The Rockefeller Center In New York. It has amazing sculptures, a good restaurant and a very classy bar.

Hero is... The film director, Christopher Nolan.
Favorite material... old leather that's used on notebooks
Relaxation is... reading literature by Dante in a café
Biggest interiors nightmare... Anything that promotes clutter. I grew up in that environment and hated it.
My passions are... making artwork that best visualizes my inner thoughts and exhibiting them to the public. To be able to bring forth your ideas/ emotions to reality is a very unique gift and should not be taken for granted.
I'm getting into... SLR photography My modern must-have is... laptops
The next big thing is... iRobot Roomba 560 Vacuum Cleaning Robot
My fashion style is.. modern conservative gentleman with a hint of a dark side.
I collect... Fine art prints such as etchings and monoprints
I can't live without... my Blackberry and studio

*For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist.

Sunday, 15 March 2009

HOT 100: MEET SCOTLAND'S MOST ELIGIBLE MEN & WOMEN, Scotland On Sunday 08/02/09




Hot 100: Meet Scotland's most eligible men and women

Funny, sexy, successful and intelligent: these are the men and women who have everything - except a significant other in their life. In Spectrum this week, we bring you all you need to know about Scotland's most wanted.

THE MEN

From skier to screenwriter, tenor to TV presenter, choose your favourite from these 50 testosterone-fuelled fellas

12 FRANK TO

Artist, 26
Glasgow

Unique selling point

The figurative painter is gaining quite a name for himself in contemporary art circles, with a celebrity following that includes Star Trek's Patrick Stewart - so that should ensure he lives long and prospers.

Fantasy Valentine

"It would have to be someone who could put up with my split personality. I can be very intense when I'm working - it's a 24/7 job and I can work some unholy hours. But when I stop, I have a real sense of humour. As for where we'd go on a Valentine's date, I'm quite a traditionalist so we'd probably just get a coffee somewhere quiet, so I could explore their mind and try to understand them."

Turn-on

Blue eyes and anyone who can keep him on his toes - he likes surprises.

Turn-off

Smoking and bad manners.

In another life...

He'd probably be a car designer. "On my course at Art College we studied vehicle design - one of the graduates designed a car that was used in the recent James Bond film."

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist.

ART OF MAKING A LIVING by Colin Cardwell, The Herald 27/01/09




A good grounding in business can be an essential asset for emerging young artists, say Colin Cardwell

There are two distinct sets of figures that dominate artist Frank To's life- the tenebrous wraith- like bodies that inhabit his canvases and the ones that populate the bottom line of his business. He talks with almost as much energy about the need to weather the economic storm as he does about his painting.

The 26- year- old already has his work hanging in the private collection of actor Patrick Stewart, forever to be known as Captain Jean-Luc Picard of Star Trek fame, and beside the work of Andy Warhol and Picasso in New York.

Frank grew up in Glasgow and studied at St Ninian's High School where, he developed an interest in art in his teens ("I remember being impressed by Peter Howson's work on CD covers") he was also given lessons in sound business by his Hong Kong born mother, who is a self- employed caterer.

He had, he said decided to make fine art his career at an early stage and Huddersfield University was the only institution at the time that combined his twin interests of fine art and business.

After two years of a BA he took a year out to travel in Europe, which sparked an appreciation for Michelangelo, then took a work placement, returning to Glasgow and a studio in the Merchant City with the kind of serious drive that was beginning to distinguish him from the typical art student.

Unlike most of his contemporaries, he was applying to galleries which he continued to do during a further year studying for an MA in Fine Arts at the Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design in Dundee. "It made economic sense; I have a place to work from, free internet access and I was thinking long term," he says.

In 2005, just before completing the Masters, Frank received an offer from the Fairfax Contemporary Art Gallery in London to show his work at the Affordable Art Fair, the showcase for contemporary art priced at under £3000.

"The gallery took all my Masters work," he says. By the end of the three days all but one painting has been sold." This, for a new artist who had never been heard of, was unusual. The gallery hadn't been sure how the audience would react to my work, "says Frank. "I think they were surprised."

He admits that he was surprised too. "But I was very pleased because not only did it allow me to start up in business as a self employed artist but importantly, it allowed my work to be seen by new, emerging and established galleries. Because it sold well, a lot of other galleries started taking notice and I began to get offers.

Wary of making too many commitments, he returned to Glasgow to set up his own studio space, currently at Wasps Artists' Studios in the city's east end- a charitable company that provides studios for more than 750 artists at 17 locations throughout Scotland.

This, unsurprisingly, was no mere chance either. Anticipating the competition for studios, he had begun to search in his second year at Huddersfield.

"By beginning at 20 I knew I was going through the waiting list while I was still studying. Luckily for me, it worked out quite well."

Start- up cash was needed and he contacted the Princes Scottish Youth Business Trust (PSYBT) and Business Gateway. "I started taking commissions and making commitments, "he says. The first year was extremely difficult- probably he concedes, down to his taking on an overload of work, "But I had to get my name known on the art circuit, to get galleries to notice me."

He was also assiduous in keeping the galleries undated with his developments and raising his profile- which was given a boost when Patrick Stewart, who was chancellor of Huddersfield University, came to his BA degree show.

"We had a chat, then I had an email from him saying that he had enjoyed my work. I went to London to see him and he bought two of my paintings."

This engendered more interest among private collectors and his work was seen by Michel Witmer, an art historian and dealer who now has a Frank To in his New York collection, which includes a Picasso and Andy Warhol. "For me to be hung beside guys like that is something major," says Frank.

Influenced by the New Glasgow Boys, including Howson and Ken Currie, Frank describes his oil paintings as being on the boundaries of figurative and conceptual art. His smaller pieces sell for around £1700 and the largest for more than £5000 and the value of his work has, he says, increased significantly in the past three years.

In the meantime, he retains a connection with PSYBT: "I believe in the same things they do, in terms of motivating new business. I plan to be mentoring young artists, I've been asked to be on the committee and I'm always willing to help."

In five years, he says, the only certainty is that he will still be an artist, and still looking after business. "A lot of people think that there are no job prospects in fine art, but it is very much a real job. You have to keep certain hours, you have to do your book- keeping and make sure all your paints and materials are in stock. And in this the current economic climate, where people are in a state of fear, art can be both an inspiration and an investment.

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist.

Tuesday, 10 February 2009

ARTISTS WORK ON SHOW by The Courier, 02/12/08




A DUNCAN of Jordanstone Art College graduate has returned to Dundee to exhibit at the Queens Gallery Christmas Show.

Frank To, who graduated with a Masters of Fine Art degree, is exhibiting a selection of his latest work.

His latest exhibition follows a successful showing at the Edinburgh Art Fair.

"Frank's Striking figurative images have featured in various of our mixed shows, leading to our featuring a larger body of his work in a successful exhibition in January 2008." Gallery director Joyce McGlone said.

"Not only is it a pleasure to hang Frank's work in the gallery for our customers to enjoy and purchase, it is also a delight to work with a talented young artist who has a completely professional approach to the business of art."

Frank (26), who now works in Glasgow, has earned international recognition as a leading contemporary figurative painter.

His work has been purchased by Star Trek's Patrick Stewart and hangs alongside Picasso and Warhol in private collections in New York.

The Christmas Show runs until December 24.

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist.

Wednesday, 4 February 2009

COME TO By Homes Plus Scotland Magazine, Nov- Dec 08




COME TO

The Kilmorack Gallery's annual Christmas exhibition features the work of Glasgow based artist Frank To. The Beauly based gallery used to be an old church before it was completely refurbished. At 26, To is already winning an enviable reputation for himself as a contemporary figurative painter, having already established a loyal following, including a number of high profile buyers. Such collectors include, Patrick Stewart. A Masters graduate of Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art, To has also trained in Yorkshire. In recent years, he has exhibited alongside some of the greats of the international art scene such as Peter Howson, Tracy Emin and Damien Hirst. His work has also featured in several galleries nationwide. He is now represented in New York by Witmer Fine Art who has in the past sold works by Monet, Picasso, Van Gogh and Andy Warhol.

Kilmorack Gallery, by Beauly, Inverness- shire. Tel 01463 783 230 http://www.kilmorackgallery.co.uk

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist

Sunday, 1 February 2009

CHRISTMAS EXHIBITION 2008 By The Herald 29/11/08





Kilmorack Gallery, by Beauly, Inverness- shire, 01463 782230 www.kilmorackgallery.co.uk Thur- Sun, 11am- 5:30pm until end of March.

Gallery owner Tony Davidson, of the Kilmorack Gallery near Beauly, always pulls together a fine gathering of artists for the annual Christmas exhibition. 3D makers in this show include Illona Morrice, Laurence Broderick, Angus Clyne, Lotte Glob, Sam MacDonald and Peter White. Gallery favourites James Hawkins, Robert McAulay, Eugenia Vronskaya and Kirstie Cohen also have some fine paintings on show, as do relative nercomers Frank To and Paul Bloomer.

Shetland- based Bloomer was born in the Black Country and worked as a labourer in an engineering factory before turning to art as a career. He spent a year at the Royal Academy in London and eight years ago, entranced by the ever- changing light of the Shetland Isles, packed his etching press in his car and headed north. His paintings, which burst with colour and energy, have a real graphic feel.

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist.

Monday, 26 January 2009

ARTIST IN HIS STUDIO By Gordon May, The Glaswegian 02/10/08



A NEW breed of Scottish artist with a devoted celebrity following will be showcasing his latest work at the W.A.S.P.S studio in Glasgow.

Glasgow based artist, Frank to will be featured in the highly anticipated event "W.A.S.P.S Open Studio Weekend" at the Workshop and Artists' Studio Provision Scotland building in Dennistoun, opening Saturday.

To will be opening his workshop to the public, displaying new work yet to be exhibited.

At 26, To is already winning an enviable reputation as a contemporary figurative painter, having establishing a loyal following, including a number of high profile buyers. Such a collector is Star Trek legend, Patrick Stewart. Additionally, To's work has been featured in the STV detective drama, Rebus.

A Masters graduate of Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art, To has also trained in Yorkshire.

In recent years he has exhibited alongside some of the greats of the international art scene.

His work has also featured in several galleries nationwide including the Fairfax Gallery, Tunbridge Wells (2005), Beaux Art Gallery, Bath (2006), Albemarle Gallery, London (2007) and Queens Gallery, Dundee (2008).

He is now represented in New York by Witmer Fine Art, that has in the past sold works by Monet, Picasso, Van Gogh and Andy Warhol. To is currently riding the crest of a wave with his work, and prices are soaring accordingly due to his popularity.

To draws inspiration from the Renaissance sculptor, Michelangelo could visualise the human form within a block of marble. To, similarly, teases out figures from the initially abstract images.

To said: "This event will provide me with the unique opportunity to show the public how I work. W.A.S.P.S Open Studios' opens on Saturday and Sunday at 77 Hanson Street.

Friday, 23 January 2009

FRANK TAKES THE HIGH ROAD FOR HIS ART by David Oliver, The Extra Newspaper, 11/09/08




A SOUTHSIDE artist will be featured in an exhibition next week in the Highlands.

Frank To (left), from Newton Mearns, will have his work displayed from September 19 in the Art and the Word show at the Kilmorack Gallery in Beauly, near Inverness.

Frank (26) has already exhibited alongside Tracy Emin, Damien Hirst and Peter Howson, and sold pieces to high- profile buyers including Star Trek legend Patrick Stewart, currently on stage in Hamlet in the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Frank's work has also been featured on screen in STV detective drama Rebus.

This latest show is of artists who have created work inspired by literature. But Frank says his main inspiration comes from Michelangelo.

He said: "This will provide me with the opportunity to show the public how I am inspired by literal text. I'm showing a more personal side in my new work."

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist

Monday, 12 January 2009

BEAULY GALLERY LURES TOP GLASGOW ARTIST by Samantha Chetwynd,The Press & Journal Inverness 06/09/08


ARTIST INSPIRED BY MICHELANGELO

By Samantha Chetwynd

A GRADUATE from Dundee Art School who draws inspiration from Michelangelo will exhibit his work at an Inverness- shire gallery next week.

Frank To, 26, will have four paintings on display at the Art and the Word show at the Kilmorack Gallery, Beauly.

His work will be exhibited alongside several established Scottish artists who have created work inspired by literature.

Mr To, who is based in Glasgow, is already creating a reputation as a contemporary figurative painter, having established a loyal following that includes a number of high- profile buyers such as Star Trek legend Patrick Stewart.

His work has also been featured in television detective drama Rebus.

And in recent years his work has been exhibited alongside that of Tracy Emin and Damien Hirst.

He said: "This exhibition will provide me the opportunity to show the public how I am inspired by literal text.

"In a way, I'm showing a more personal side with the new work."

The exhibition opens on September 12.

Friday, 2 January 2009

YOUNG PROFESSIONAL by Jan Patience The Herald 02/02/08


Frank To's work is fired by ambition says Jan Patience

Young artists are not what they used to be. Once upon a time, any self respecting artist in their twenties spent whole days down the pub, smoking furiously, drinking heavily and arguing over weighty issues such as whether or not art schools destroy art. These days, you are more likely to find them networking with London galleries or with agents in New York, putting together business plans and setting up a website in order to market and control their own work.

Who is to say which is the better path, but what is certain is that being a talented young artist in 2008 is a vastly different experience from being such a creature a generation ago.

Frank To is the only exhibiting artist at the Queen's Gallery's New Generations exhibition who hasn't got his own website. But the 25- year- old, from Newton Mearns south of Glasgow, does have a New York agent called Michel Witmer and a London gallery, Albermarle.

He is currently riding the crest of a wave with his work, and prices are soaring accordingly. This time last year, a reasonable sized To painting would have cost you £800. Today it would be £1700.

There is real drama in his work- a brooding mental energy that sucks you in and leaves you wondering what, why, where? He talks about how his hero Michelangelo considered marble for days on end before teasing out the figure within, and how it is his preferred method of working too.

He places himself into the work at every turn. One painting in the New Generations exhibition, Time after Time, shows two figures facing each other with a gap between them, He says "This came out of a personal experience I had of having feelings for someone which were never realised although there is a sense of ‘what if?'"

There is a multi- layered approach to Frank To's work. In the first place, he creates an abstract scene. He works quickly, layering the paint in sweeping gestures. He then drips turpentine on the surface to create a mottled textured layer and uses whatever he has to hand- a discarded neon light strip is a favourite- to work the surface into a state of readiness.

At that point, he steps back, and looks for the figure within. His figures are then drafted in with a rag soaked in turpentine.

The influence of masters, old and young is obvious. He studied under Calum Colvin at Duncan of Jordanstone in Dundee, where he gained an MA in 2005. "Calum instilled in me the need to be professional and the way he presented himself was a huge influence," To says.

With the professionalism comes ambition. "My goal is to be made a member of the Royal Academy by the time I'm 30," he smiles. "Turner was admitted by the time he was my age, so I won't be the youngest ever, but it is a real burning desire."

For more information please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Artist

Tuesday, 30 December 2008

TO BOLDLY GO TO DUNDEE EXHIBITION by The Courier 11th January 2008




DUNDEE- TRAINED artist Frank To is going from strength to strength with his latest Scottish exhibition.

Twelve of To's paintings will be featured in the highly anticipated group show "New Generations" at the Queen's Gallery, Dundee, opening on January 26.

To will be exhibiting alongside three emerging Scottish painters tipped for the top.

To (25) is already winning an enviable reputation for himself as a contemporary figurative painter, having already established a loyal following, including a number of high profile buyers. One such buyer is Star Trek's Captain Jean- Luc Picard, Patrick Stewart, who now owns five of To's paintings.

A Master graduate of Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art, To has also trained in Yorkshire.

In recent years he has exhibited alongside some of the greats of the international art scene such as Peter Howson, Tracy Emin and Damien Hirst,

His work has also featured in several galleries nationwide including the Fairfax Gallery, Tunbridge Wells (2005); Beux Art Gallery, Bath (2006) and the Albemarle Gallery, London (2007).

He is now represented in New York by Witmer Fine Art that has in the past sold works by Picasso, Van Gogh and Andy Warhol.

He draws inspiration from the Renaissance sculptor, Michelangelo.

It was said Michelangelo could visualise the human form within a block of marble.

To, similarly, teases out figures from initially abstract images.

To said, "I'm delighted to be one of the very few invited to do this exhibition. I hope this show will be the one of many that contributes the importance and reputation of Scottish painting in the art world."

Sunday, 28 December 2008

BOLDLY GLOWING by Jan Patience, Homes and Interiors Scotland Magazine Jan - Feb 2008 issue 57 Pg 90




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.

For more information on the forthcoming exhibition at the Queen's Gallery, Dundee, in which Frank To is exhibiting alongside work by Kim Scouller, Douglas Ralston and Jane Cruikshank, Dundee, visit www.queensgallery.co.uk

S.T.V Interview With Frank To Fine Artist


Interview by Nige Buckland

Scottish artist Frank To talks about his abstract paintings and recent RBS Young Entrepreneur nomination.

To watch the interview, please click here

Thursday, 25 December 2008

BRUSH WITH SUCCESS by Scottish Field October 2007




BRUSH WITH SUCCESS


Glasgow born artist Frank To is going from strength to strength since graduating from Dundee Art School. At 25, To is already winning an enviable reputation for himself as a contemporary figurative painter, having established a loyal following, including a number of high profile buyers. One such buyer is Star Trek legend, Patrick Stewart who now owns five of To's paintings. Additionally, STV has snapped up some of his work to be featured on detective drama, Rebus this autumn.

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Art.

Tuesday, 23 December 2008

STARSTRUCK BY FRANK'S WORK By Emma Davison, Huddersfield Daily Examiner 25th Aug 2007







By Emma Davison

STAR TREK legend Patrick Stewart boasts a fine art collection.

But while the Mirfield-born star has his pick of works by the world's top artists, he doesn't have to travel the universe to find some of his favourites.

Frank To, a fine art graduate from Huddersfield University, is deeply admired by Patrick and has sold him five of his paintings since graduating from his course three years ago.

And, unsurprisingly, the Royal Shakespeare Company actor prefers his art to have a theatrical quality.

Frank first came face-to-face with Patrick, the university's chancellor, at his end-of-course show.

He said: "I was putting the finishing touches to my work before the show and my tutor came in and asked me if I wanted to meet Patrick, who was having a sneak preview of the degree show.

"He told me he was completely blown away by my work, and the style and scale of it.

"We got talking about it in some depth, and after the show he got back in touch with me and requested some paintings.

"He enjoys the emotional impact of my work and the pieces of mine he has collected are very emotive.

"They are quite dark and have a Shakespearean quality to them. One has a visual reference to the Tempest.

"Patrick doesn't tell me what he wants; he lets me be myself. Because he's an actor and I'm an artist we're both trying to express our unique voices in our own fields.

"He understands the importance of being individual and not just producing work that is a copy of something else.

"He is now a great supporter of my work and makes the effort to come and see me when I'm exhibiting in London."

The admiration he has gained from the star is just another feather in the Glasgow-born artist's cap.

Aged just 25 and back living in Glasgow, he is already winning an enviable reputation for himself as a contemporary figurative painter. He has exhibited alongside some of the greats of the international art scene, including Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin.

Frank says he owes a big part of his success to the time he spent at the university, the only one in Britain to offer a fine arts and business BA degree course.

He said: "I owe my success to the university. It gave me the solid foundation and inspiration for becoming an artist.

"Huddersfield gave me the essential foundations to do my paintings and helped me develop my work, which is still drawn from my final year there.

"The achievements I have gained after leaving the university are more than some people who graduate from top institutes like the Royal College of Art.

"Having the talent is not enough to survive as an artist - you have to know how to use it. And this is where the university helped me, by teaching me how to promote and market myself.

"The staff were fantastic, and gave me the support and encouragement I needed to establish myself as an artist.''

Since graduating his work, which sells for £2,000 a piece, has featured in several national art fairs and shows. He is now represented by the New York art dealer Michel Witmer, who has in the past sold works by Picasso, Van Gough and Andy Warhol.

In spite of his success Frank is determined not to forget Huddersfield and, like Patrick, champions it wherever possible.

He said: "Whenever I travel to exhibitions in places like London or New York I always emphasise that I am there because of Huddersfield.

"To me Huddersfield is more than a small town, because it's the place where I found my edge in painting.''

For more information, please visit the official website of Frank To Fine Art.