LA MECÁNICA
DE LOS TUBOS



As the son of interior designers, Connor developed a strong interest in draftsmanship, architecture and art from an early age. Teaching himself photography and painting, he studied Fine Art at Central St Martins, London, one of the world’s top art schools whose alumnae boast Jarvis Cocker, Richard Hamilton and Alexander McQueen to name a few. In search of further technical vigor in his artistic practice, he went on to study politics, philosophy and economics in the city where his parents met: Manchester.

Learning of Existentialism, History and Aesthetics motivated deeper reflection on the human condition and its representation. While nurturing a discursive range of influences and love for the rich history of religious and secular art, architecture, and the human experience as sources of reinterpretation, his work avoids being categorized as emblematic of any particular movement. However, he sites Giorgio de Chirico, Francis Bacon, Georg- es Braque, and Pablo Picasso as some of his inspirations.

Connor currently practices in Barcelona, Spain, immersed with a community international artists at Groc Studios.





“AS FAR AS WE CAN DISCERN, THE SOLE PURPOSE OF HUMAN EXISTENCE IS TO KINDLE A LIGHT IN THE DARKNESS OF MERE BEING”

C.G. Jung: Memories, Dreams, Reflections





















LA MECÁNICA
DE LOS TUBOS



As the son of interior designers, Connor developed a strong interest in draftsmanship, architecture and art from an early age. Teaching himself photography and painting, he studied Fine Art at Central St Martins, London, one of the world’s top art schools whose alumnae boast Jarvis Cocker, Richard Hamilton and Alexander McQueen to name a few. In search of further technical vigor in his artistic practice, he went on to study politics, philosophy and economics in the city where his parents met: Manchester.

Learning of Existentialism, History and Aesthetics motivated deeper reflection on the human condition and its representation. While nurturing a discursive range of influences and love for the rich history of religious and secular art, architecture, and the human experience as sources of reinterpretation, his work avoids being categorized as emblematic of any particular movement. However, he sites Giorgio de Chirico, Francis Bacon, Georg- es Braque, and Pablo Picasso as some of his inspirations.

Connor currently practices in Barcelona, Spain, immersed with a community international artists at Groc Studios.


















SOLO EXHIBITIONS


THE NEW YORKER NOVEMBER 2023November 2023

THE NEW YORKER NOVEMBER 2023Download PDF


GALLERY SHOWS