Daniel Crews-Chubb (b.1984) is a London-based painter whose mixed-media works wrestle with the human condition and modes of selfexpression. This monograph, Out of Chaos, is
published to coincide with his solo exhibition at Timothy Taylor, New York, which brings together
new paintings and works on paper.
Crews-Chubb’s paintings exist somewhere between figuration and abstraction. They draw
on a wide variety of references, including ancient cosmologies, historic artefacts and sculpture,
pre-Columbian deities, Cubism, Abstract Expressionism and Hellenic myth. He intertwines
canonical sources and classical allusions in his paintings, creating a highly personal, idiosyncratic lexicon of human, celestial and bestial figures.
Out of Chaos takes its title from the ancient Greek notion that chaos is a state of undifferentiated matter from which the universe emerged. The paintings that form this series feature urgent, gestural marks and passages of vivid colour, centred around the figure as a motif. The bodies that he depicts are ageless, nongendered and non-racial – conduits for feeling, rather than signifiers of individuals.
This publication reproduces Crews-Chubb’s paintings from 2015 to 2024, starting with his
early works and subsequently organised into seven series. Notable among these are the recent
Immortals (2022–) and Out of Chaos, which is the focal point of his solo exhibition. The book also features an introduction by the writer Jennifer Higgie, an essay by art historian Matthew Holman and an interview with writer Amah-Rose Abrams. Daniel Crews-Chubb was born in Northampton in 1984. He completed his BA at Chelsea College of Arts, London, in 2009 and undertook the Turps Studio Programme, London, in 2013. He lives and works in London. His first solo museum exhibition will take place at the Long Museum, Shanghai, in November 2024.