Nick Fudge attended Christ's College, Finchley from 1972 to 1977 where he was in the same class group as the writer Will Self. He left early, at sixteen, to attend a graphic design course at Barnet College. Fudge graduated from Goldsmiths College, London, in 1988, despite destroying all his student work on the eve of his graduate show, an act inspired by a Duchampian thought-experiment which asked "what if an artist just disappeared?" Shortly thereafter, Fudge "went underground"; moving to the United States with his then-wife, the radical poet Tracy Angel. He received his MFA from Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After graduating from Tyler, Fudge and Angel embarked upon an extended exploration of America. This road trip, with its emphasis in the American West, was formative for Fudge; "a kind of rebirth". Fudge counts the Modernist painters Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso, Francis Picabia, and Jasper Johns, the poet T. S. Eliot, and the writer James Joyce amongst his biggest influences.
Work
For the twenty-five years that Fudge remained in self-imposed exile from the art world, he made and kept his ongoing work in secret, showing his paintings and digital works to only a few other artists and close friends. He began creating digital artworks in the early 1990s when he found a Macintosh Classic II in a thrift store in Montana and, sharing it with Angel who used it to write her poems, taught himself the graphics software of the day. He claims that his entire digital oeuvre is still stored on outmoded macOShard drives, almost impossible to access using modern laptops. The Berlin-based art critic and curator An Paenhuysen has described these works as "post-internet in the way that the tools of the Web to create an object that in the end exists in the real world. The long incubation period of the work editable digital image file... shows no trace of work over a period of time... As such, Fudge's prints are simultaneously dated and futuristic. They are modern, postmodern, and post-postmodern, all in one". Fudge's oil paintings display a deep understanding of the Modernist canon; borrowings from, and reimaginings of Cubist or Abstract Expressionist works are made to question painting itself as against digital-age hyper-imaging with its easy image editing and erasure. His sculptural works include exquisitely crafted faux luxury products and art supplies Branded "Fudge"; "Old Masters Soaps", and "Picasso Drive", a crushed Citroën C4 Picasso permanently installed at the Observer Building in Hastings.
Exhibitions
1992, Karsten Schubert, London, "Fifth Anniversary Exhibition", curated by Michael Landy. Group show featuring Mat Collishaw, Keith Coventry, Tobias Eyferth, Nick Fudge, and Sarah Lucas
1994, Temple Art Gallery, Philadelphia, "Materials for Nothing", MFA thesis exhibition