“In previous work Ospina has taken portraits from the web profiles of a tech-savy youth, literate in the manipulations and visual vocabulary of contemporary image-making. Having reframed these portraits via painting as an interaction between identity, technology and media, Ospina now pans back to present the world these avatars inhabit. [His new work reveals] an environment in which architectural spaces collapse into landscapes from news reports […] riot scenes fold in to bedroom interiors, […] recognisable landmarks are smothered by the overdeveloped filters of Photoshop extremists, […] it is an environment forged by the vagaries of the users of social media and the products that define them. Ospina’s work uses architectures of painting as a way of negotiating contemporary problems of image-making and artistic production in a networked world of complex relationships, inconsistent representations, and of technologies that have produced a flow of information at a magnitude and rate that is literally super-human. He says: “I try to work in ways that reflect continuous changes in attention at a rate and method that would have seemed absurd before the arrival of the Internet, simulating what happens in our minds when we jump from image to image accumulating and merging layers of visual information. I want the work to reflect how the Internet has mutated the way we look at sets of images or contemplate a stream of information.” [His work] is ultimately a record of how the Internet has transformed our relationship to images, to space and to each other in bizarre and unprecedented ways.”
– exhibition text from Megalopolis by Mark Jackson, courtesy of IMT Gallery