Thespian
Oil on canvas, 2011
104 x 75cm
SOLD
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Nicholas Jolly
Born in 1962 Nicholas Jolly initially studied Fine Art at Gloucestershire College of Art. Shortly after graduating, a self portrait was accepted for the John Player Portrait Awards at National Portrait Gallery in London, where it was bought by the art critic Brian Sewell. This was to start a series of events that culminated in a widely publicized exhibition of Ten Young Painters of Promise, 1995.
Encouraged by his early success, Jolly entered a three-year post-graduate diploma course at the Royal Academy Schools, London, where he developed a a growing affinity with a new generation of figurative painting coming out of Germany and Scotland. On graduating he began to exhibit frequently in London. A major exhibition of his work held at Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery in 1990, and in the following year his first solo exhibition was held at the Paton Gallery, London, where his work was bought for the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
In 1994 Jolly spent most of the year working in Connecticut, USA. On his return to London he began to exhibit at Beaux Art, London. Influenced by his time in the USA he developed an interest in vintage American magazines and their British 1950’s counterparts, such as Picture Post; portraying the formalized poses and contrived mannerisms of 1950’s advertising. In the same year, one of his large scale works was accepted by the Osaka Triennale, Japan,- winning a major purchase prize in the exhibition. His success continued to grow, with his work becoming exhibited widely in the US and in Europe
In 1996 Jolly received an invitation to participate in the highly prestigious Premio Marco exhibition at the Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Monterrey, Mexico. The following year he began to work on a highly ambitious triptych depicting a car crash, which took two years to complete. The finished 16 foot long painting Fatal Collision was finally exhibited at the Osaka Triennale in 2001, where it won a major purchase prize. A year after completing this painting he decided to take a break from from full-time painting allowing him to embark on other projects. One project in particular was the result of suggestion from a friend that he should start a humorous gentlemen’s magazine called The Chap. The magazine proved far more successful than he could have anticipated, resulting in a commission to write 4 spin-off books, as well as TV animation work. In 2005 he decided to return to painting and for the past four years he has continued to work from his studio in London.
108 Fine Art are delighted to host this the artists first major exhibition in ten years.
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Olivia
Oil on canvas, 2011
75 x 106cm
SOLD
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Playtime
Oil on canvas 2011
101.6 x 91.4cm
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Playmate
Oil on canvas 2009
101.6 x 91.4cm
SOLD
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Christina
Oil on canvas, 1997
71.1 x 58.4cm
SOLD
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Boxman
Oil on canvas, 2009
167.6 x 147.3cm
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Boxman II
Oil on canvas, 2009
81.2 x 68.5cm
SOLD
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Effigy
Oil on canvas, 2008
190.4 x 133.3cm
SOLD
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Early Warning Device
Oil on canvas, 2007
152.4cm x 127cm
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A Message from Our Leader
Oil on canvas, 2008
172.7 x 254cm
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Father and Son
Oil on canvas 2005
152.4cm x 127cm |

Quality Time
Oil on canvas. 1997
203.3 x 182.9cm |

Saint
Oil on canvas, 1996
101.6 x 91.4cm
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