As a child, Cooper’s artistic talent came naturally, but remained largely unexplored thanks to a typical childhood obsession with sports, including basketball, football and golf. While he knew he wasn’t going to become a famous sportsman — “I was short and not that fast,” Cooper chuckles — the business classes he was doing in his first year at college hadn’t felt right either.
When Cooper transferred to another college the following year, he remembered how much fun he’d had in art classes and enrolled immediately in the art school. One of only 30 students to be accepted, he opted to focus on graphic design. It taught him many of the techniques he
uses today. “I always wanted to be hands- on, not reliant on working with a computer, because otherwise the work felt like it had no real connection to me,” he explains. “Now, with these big canvases I’m working on and the way I paint, I want it to be wiggly, I want it to be funky.”
Looking to the work of artists such as David Hockney has helped to free him
from convention. “David’s super-bright, radical colours opened my mind to realising I can express any emotion I want through colour,” Cooper says. “I can paint a stereo blue, or I can paint it brown like it is in real life. It’s a painting, it’s not reality, so I can do whatever I want.”
The result is that Cooper never paints any two pieces the same way, even if the subject is something as simple as a bowl of oranges — “trying to make that satisfying enough to stand on its own,” he says. “When someone looks at my work, I want them to feel alive inside, to be overwhelmed by the positive emotion radiating from the canvas.” Matisse, he
says, “was always trying to paint into the unknown. That’s what I’m trying to do too. I love the challenge of finding new depths and perspectives every time.”
White Noise is at Maddox, Westbourne Grove from 14 October – 20 November
112 Westbourne Grove, London, W2 5RU | [email protected] | +44 (0) 207 989 0304 maddoxgallery.com