Nik Cornwell
Drawing on Past & Present (A Journey into Negative Hyper-Realism)

Nik Cornwell’s artistic career began with his mother’s relentless request to “draw an elephant!” It was an ambitious assignment for a kid in mid-1970s South East London…a place where the local fauna featured plenty of pigeons but notably few trunk-bearing giants. Essentially, he was tasked with being a wildlife expert in a concrete jungle.
After surviving the elephant-drawing trials of his youth, Nik headed to Lewisham College before leveling up with a sculpture degree from Camberwell College of Arts. He eventually pulled a total full circle move, returning to Lewisham College to run the show as a tutor and course leader for several programs.
For the last decade, he has been in a committed relationship with the medium, obsessively tweaking his style and geeking out over materials. He’s been busy hoarding new techniques, living by the mantra that the learning curve is infinite.
After years of perfecting the “is that a photograph?” aesthetic, Nik stumbled upon an old sketch of his featuring some particularly moody, harsh side-lighting. Looking back at it, he realized Hyper-Realism was getting a bit of a cold shoulder from the art world. Critics and casual viewers alike were getting “bored” with perfection, tossing around dismissive comments like, “What’s even the point?”
Since he’d already stumbled upon a fix for this collective yawn, Nik decided to lean into it and develop a formal style. He officially dubbed it ‘Negative Hyper-Realism,’ effectively giving the technical middle finger to the “too-perfect-to-be-interesting” crowd.
This exhibition serves up a timeline of Nik’s work from 1990 to 2025, handpicked by Damiyr Saleem. Damiyr’s trajectory went from sitting in Nik’s classroom at Lewisham College to becoming a talented curator, friend, and colleague. In a fitting tribute to their history, Nik only agreed to the show once he knew his former student was the one holding the curator’s clipboard.
