Degree: MFA Fine Art
University: Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design
Graduation Year: 2025
MK Thomson is a figurative oil painter from Ullapool, in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland. Her practice is an ongoing study into the contrast between the non-permanence of existence, the finite nature of physical being, and the timeless accessibility of the body as a visual language. Thomson is concurrently engaged with the enduring significance of oil painting as a tradition that, in contemporary contexts, is characterised by a persistent negotiation of continuity and rupture, such as in paintings by Justin Mortimer and Gerhard Richter. Thomson’s practice is driven by process, with the tangibility and materiality of oil paint acting as a catalyst for how she responds to, and rearticulates, the human body. This practically driven approach provides a structure of actuality that is saturated by her philosophical studies, primary amongst her influences is Giorgio Agamben’s notion that to be contemporary is to be disconnected from the conditions of one’s time. Subsequently, the non-narrative bodies pictured reflect the atemporal and the untimely. Thomson’s current practice is an open-ended enquiry into the parallel conditions of contemporary being and contemporary painting; she believes that to engage in either is to walk a shifting landscape of the grounded and the ambiguous. The monumental figures she paints reflect a version of the body that oscillates between solidity, eternity, and the unknowable precarity of now. Ultimately, beyond the fact that they reflect the human, these paintings exist in realms of uncertainty, suggesting that perhaps, beyond the physical truth of existence, life is uncertain.
I am a figurative oil painter from Ullapool, in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland. My practice is an ongoing study into the contrast between the non-permanence of existence, the finite nature of physical being, and the timeless accessibility of the body as a visual language. I am concurrently engaged with the enduring significance of oil painting as a tradition that, in contemporary contexts, is characterised by a persistent negotiation of continuity and rupture, such as in paintings by Justin Mortimer and Gerhard Richter. My practice is driven by process, with the tangibility and materiality of oil paint acting as a catalyst for how I respond to, and rearticulate, the human body. This practically driven approach provides a structure of actuality that is saturated by my philosophical studies, primary amongst my influences is Giorgio Agamben’s notion that to be contemporary is to be disconnected from the conditions of one’s time. Subsequently, the non-narrative bodies in my paintings reflect the atemporal and the untimely.
My current practice is an open-ended enquiry into the parallel conditions of contemporary being and contemporary painting; I believe that to engage in either is to walk a shifting landscape of the grounded and the ambiguous. The monumental figures I paint reflect a version of the body that oscillates between solidity, eternity, and the unknowable precarity of now. Ultimately, beyond the fact that they reflect the human, these paintings exist in realms of uncertainty, suggesting that perhaps, beyond the physical truth of existence, life is uncertain.
(2025) In the Works, Generator Projects, Dundee
(2025) MK Thomson and Daniel Murray, An Talla Solais, Ullapool
(2025) Signature Art Prize Finalists Exhibition, The White Box, London
(2025) Masters Degree Show, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, Dundee
(2024) Best of Scottish Art Schools Grad Show, artpistol Gallery, Glasgow
(2024) Open Studio, Studio Canale, Montrose
(2024) this is where we are, The Ceilidh Place, Ullapool
(2024) New Gallery Opening Show, artpistol Gallery, Glasgow
(2024) People Watching, Heriot Gallery, Edinburgh
(2023) Human Connections, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, Dundee
(2023) Undergraduate Degree Show, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, Dundee
(2023) NT Art Month, Heriot Gallery, Edinburgh
(2023) Festival Show, Heriot Gallery, Edinburgh
(2023) Keeping the baw rolling, Salt Space, Glasgow
(2025) Signature Art Prize Finalist
(2023) Graham Lang Prize for Excellence in Drawing and Painting
(2024) William S. Phillips Scholarship Award
(2024) Visual Artist and Craft Makers Award