How you can Support my Studio

If you’d like to support my studio directly, you can do it here:

A note from Matt The Unfathomable Artist:

I’m writing this differently from my usual posts.

The Reality with my Art Working

Most of the time I share the finished pieces, the ideas and the process. Today I want to be honest about the practical side: keeping the studio running takes real resources and I can’t do that on inspiration alone.

I’m an independent artist. I work solid hours, I research, do all my own administration, draft, paint and keep going until the piece is ready. That part is the privilege. The really hard part is that every new work has a cost attached to it.

The gold acrylics, heavier surfaces, panels, varnishes, the technology that keeps the workflow stable, even the cost of keeping this site online so I can keep sharing work with you. It all adds up.

So I’m making a straightforward ask.

How You Can Help

A lot of you have followed my work for a long time. People often ask if there’s a way to support the studio beyond buying an original artwork.

If the work brings you something, if you enjoy the fusion of science, nature and subconscious that I share here, please consider contributing to the Studio Fund.

What Your Support Does

This support keeps the studio moving.

  • It helps me buy the materials that make the work possible
  • Covers the running costs of sharing the work publicly
  • Supports me whilst I’m working on drafts or busily researching pieces

If you can only give the price of a coffee, every donation helps. If you can’t give at all, you’re still welcome here. Reading, sharing, commenting, being present: that support is real too.

To Corporate and Science Readers

If you represent a research body, organisation or business and you see value in supporting research-focused art, I’m happy to receive donations or formal sponsorships to aligned projects. If you want to chat, please reach out directly via email.

Thank You for being here, genuinely.

I love the work I do.

Best wishes

Matt The Unfathomable Artist

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Equation M Electro Cell

Abstract painting Equation M Electro Cell by Matt The Unfathomable Artist. A central, glowing rectangular block of gold, electric blue, and copper striations sits against a deep, near-black background. The texture resembles a scorched circuit board or analogue glitch, created using a sandpaper drag technique.
“Equation M Electro Cell” [5th to 8th October 2025] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic on A3 (42cm x 30cm) gesso primed 5mm wooden board, 3000 x 2199 pixels

Connecting the Circuits

With Equation M Electro Cell, I wanted to return to the hardware – the physicality of things, rather than how computers operate.

When I look at the finished painting, this feels like a heat-hazed circuit board, a motherboard still holding warmth from the last surge of power. Immediately I recalled my dad’s interest in electronics. I’ve written before about the “type: The Unfathomable… Artist – Electronic Version”. Equation M Electro Cell sits in that lineage of technical references.

My dad worked with soldering irons, resistors and capacitors. I work with pigments, surface and the subconscious. The instruments are different, yet the impulse is recognisable: to make a connection, to get something to come alive, to coax an interconnection between the inanimate and human.

Process

To give the central form its particular presence, the painting needed to be built carefully. I began by painting the surrounding ground in that deep near-black and allowing it to dry completely. The surface became a kind of stable void for the central characterisation to materialise.

Only then, the following day, did I lay in the central block of colour, working the wet paint precisely. This is the intricate part. While the paint was still malleable, I used sandpaper edge to drag, scrape, and meticulously draw through the layers. The method hints at Gerhard Richter’s drag techniques, although here the abrasive surface of the paper takes the place of a squeegee.

The sandpaper pulls the golds, ochres, electric blues and violets sideways across the image. It micro-reduces the physical texture whilst increasing the visual depth, carving out bands and striations that feel close to etched copper tracks on a printed circuit board.

Upon producing the chance double M waveform equation’ at the top right of the colour block, I decided this is the entire piece itself. Further interventions with the sandpaper were measured visually—finite, and inch-by-inch considered in specific colour block areas.

Whenever I note a valuable artistic representation in a piece, I do everything to preserve the uniqueness – purposed or chance.

The Equation

The result is a kind of ‘flat textural’ field. Looking distinct from a classical era painting and more like something printed, pressed or photographic film plate– as if a motion recording in an analogue system had been frozen, glitched and made visible.

I called the work “Equation M Electro Cell” to explain a self-contained apparatus for energy transference. A cell of stored charge, or a fragment of data, suspended in the mainframe. For me, this has the same quiet magic as looking into an old radio and seeing the valves glowing: a mix of warmth and nostalgia with music harmonising softly in the background.

Did I ever tell you about my dad’s valve amp radiograms?

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Gold Sun Paint Play

Gold Sun Paint Play Matt The Unfathomable Artist
“Gold Sun Paint Play” [circa 25th April 2025] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic on opened cardboard box (approximate 11in x 8in (28cm x 21cm), 5000 x 3882 pixels shown upon cropped gesso canvas for publishing purposes.

Gold Sun Paint Play

“Gold Sun Paint Play” invites the viewer to step outside the strictures of formality to embrace a visual world ruled by spontaneity, flowing movement and bright colour. Painted on a horizontally ‘columned’ piece of torn card, this work speaks not just to the enjoyable act of painting—it appeals to childlike silliness, the process of play as a serious artistic method.

I had immense concentrated fun assembling colour blocks in the form of an abstracted landscape. Crimson-orange embraces violet. Dashes of green and cream separate the palette intensity. All the while metallic gold frames the Sun, a discernible reference point for this vista.

This play is a theatre of chance. Urgent brushstrokes overlap in gestures of compositional resolve and competition. The torn edges of the substrate remain visible, lending a documentary quality to the work—evidence of the surface history and complexity.

A visible ‘tag’ of cardboard remnant at the bottom-right corner grounds the piece in some perceivable mechanical form.

Instantly I’m reminded of words I published to my blog in November 2019:

‘I was greatly interested in Gravity, so I wrote about this.  I was greatly interested in soundwaves and the sonic boom, so I wrote about this.  Some weeks ago “i saw a buzzard flying overhead, near over my house.  It made its call.  Eureka.  I saw its wingtips and from this i determined soundwaves could be changed by engineering the surface ⚡”.

With “Gold Sun Paint Play” a notable constructive rhythm to the composition: vertical and horizontal divisions allude to maps or symbols, whilst the colour interplay attracts.

I laughed when I made a sort of giraffe face, top-right. The moment a young child tells you an abstract shape, to you, is definitely a giraffe is a wonderful point of self determination.

For those drawn to raw texture, unpredictability, and the visible trace of an artist’s mind, “Gold Sun Paint Play” is my version of how children love to paint.

Innocent. Pure.


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Breathing Manuscript

“Breathing Manuscript” [13th November 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, abstract acrylic painting on A3 250gsm mixed media paper, 4000 x 2983 pixels.

I have a passion for ancient subjects, cultures, and civilizations. Ancient Egypt particularly intrigues me, for decades.

Presently I’m informally studying the silent movie era with a focus on Hollywood stars of times past. Collating information for depth of understanding and artistic inspiration.

Silent movie levels of acting, directing and production professionalism are truly ingenious. I could talk to you about this subject for hours.

At the top left of “Breathing Manuscript” I perceived a Pharoah-like portrait. I wanted this artwork to look ancient, aged. A lost find, perhaps writings.

In my animation immediately below we can imagine viewing this piece in a cave with a fire-lit torch:

“Breathing Manuscript – Animation” [13th November 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, abstract acrylic painting in three photographs produced into a 1920 x 1424 pixels GIF animated file.

This artwork is a seed, to grow. An experimentation.

To develop potential further, classical art in new works.

“Breathing Manuscript” is contextual to “Malevolence upon Trees”. Not in theme or idea. In horror, gruesome sentiment to both pieces. Without intention.

My ‘m’ grass (as I called this) in “Malevolence upon Trees” intended to appear like writing, specifically ‘ye olde’ Shakespearean. A work taking much time and effort.

“Breathing Manuscript” is a paint play.

A final piece in this colour scheme will be produced on clay stone, preferably sculpted too. Oh goodness a kiln-fired clay sculpture. I still have the last pottery work I made in 1987.

Sometimes I make art and ask, does this need to be beautiful for people to enjoy? Being ultra-critical if it lacks beauty. Then I ask, why? Answering with.. beautiful art is popular.

Honestly though, this is my first effort in acrylic at emulating antiquity. All I know is that whenever I view this piece it has something.

I don’t know exactly what, just.. something.

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“the Rabbits of Ridge Willow – sketch one”

the Rabbits of Ridge Willow – sketch one” [28th April 2021] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, 3H HB 3B pencils, signed in black ink on A4 250gsm Artist's paper
“the Rabbits of Ridge Willow – sketch one” [28th April 2021] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, 3H HB 3B pencils, signed in black ink on A4 250gsm Artist’s paper.

“the Rabbits of Ridge Willow – sketch one” really is a very quick simple sketch from a photograph of a rabbit at Ridge Willow. 

I was stood still watching it lift up from its grass cover to chew some hay.

The first sketch session details were drawn ‘plein air’ in half an hour whilst I sat just in front of Ridge Willow, by their nearby burrow. 

This artwork is purely fun. Discovering there were rabbits actually living on Ridge Willow is a delight of nature.

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