The Francis Bacon Interiors 'The Francis Bacon Interiors' were painted between 2006–2008 and depict the Paris hotel room where
Francis Bacon's lover and muse
George Dyer committed suicide, the room in a Catholic hospital in Madrid where Bacon himself died, and a series of studios where he painted. 'The Francis Bacon Interiors' formed part of 'The Subconscious Revealed', an exhibition curated by Priseman at Huddersfield Art Gallery in 2009. Other work in the exhibition included Bacon’s ‘Figure Study Two’ and works by Freud, Auerbach, Sutherland, Kossof and Richard Hamilton. alongside the paintings, twelve etchings look at other methods of state sanctioned execution used around the world. The series examined how different countries have adopted different techniques to execute condemned prisoners, which in turn argue execution to be a socially constructed act of group catharsis.
No Human Way to Kill was exhibited at The Dazed Gallery in London in 2008 and 2011. The original paintings and drawings are held at the
Mead Art Museum at Amherst College, Massachusetts, USA with a set of twelve etchings at the
V&A, London.
Nazi Gas Chambers: From Memory To History Following on from 'No Human Way to Kill' Priseman produced the 'Gas Chambers' series which were first exhibited at The Minories Galleries, Colchester, UK. The project has three parts and focuses on the developmental steps taken in Nazi Germany that began with the gassing of the mentally ill and ended in
genocide. The first part comprises portraits of the participants of the
Wannsee Conference of 20 January 1942, the second part comprises six pencil drawings which are designed to look like hand coloured postcards and show the outsides of the hospitals in Germany and Austria where the
T4 Euthanasia programme took place between 1939 and 1941. The third part consists of five large oil paintings (each 6 ft x 9 ft) which trace the movement taken by the Nazis towards an industrialised killing process which culminated in
Auschwitz. The project was also exhibited at CoCA, Christchurch, New Zealand in 2010 and Arch 402 Gallery, London in 2012. The Wannsee portraits are held by the
Tweed Museum of Art, Duluth, Minnesota, USA and the remainder of the collection at the
Museum der Moderne, Salzburg, Austria.
Omagh In 2010 Priseman completed two paintings on the
Omagh bombing in Northern Ireland. 'Omagh 15.00' is based on a photograph of Market Street taken shortly before the explosion and 'Omagh Bombing 15.10' is based on a still from a video looking the opposite direction along Market Street towards the
Omagh Courthouse and depicts the scene just after the explosion. The paintings are held at
Wolverhampton Art Gallery, England.
Fame Priseman purchased one hundred damaged religious
icons from eBay and over-painted each with a 20th-century celebrity who died prematurely from suicide or as a result of a self-destructive lifestyle. The over-painting seeks to mimic the replacement in contemporary culture of faith with fame and of saints with ‘stars’, exploring
Jarvis Cocker’s idea that people believe fame is a kind of heaven that can “sort things out”. Priseman explores the territory of the cult of the celebrity, focusing on those amongst the celebrated who are troubled and at times unable to cope with the pressures of modern living.
Fame exhibited at Art Exchange, Colchester, England in 2013, and St Marylebone Crypt, London in 2015. Over seventy of the originals are held in the permanent collection of The
University of Arizona Museum of Art. The balance of the project is held in the collections of
Honolulu Museum of Art,
MOMA Wales,
Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art, Wayne State University Art Collection, Michigan, UMMA, Michigan, The
Dennos Museum Center, Michigan and The
Allen Memorial Art Museum, Michigan. == Selected solo exhibitions ==