Exhibition
John Reno Jackson: A Heron Amongst the Storm presents the work of emerging Caymanian artist John Reno Jackson in his first solo exhibition at the National Gallery of the Cayman Islands’ Dart Auditorium Community Gallery. The exhibition includes a series of thirteen paintings and accompanying drawings that collectively chart the artist’s ongoing journey of creative experimentation and self-discovery.
As a painter whose work is rooted in the language of abstraction, the artist utilises this formal vocabulary to explore familiar subjects and the wider landscape of the Caymanian cultural experience. Reflecting Jackson’s sustained investigation of his chosen medium, the works on display capture the curious mind and wandering imagination of an artist whose probing approach embodies the frustrating, yet ultimately rewarding, path towards artistic expression.
Presented as a coherent body of work in which each painting seeks to unlock answers to a series of rhetorical questions—about the nature of representation, the tension between abstraction and figuration, and the ways in which meaning is ultimately understood and conveyed to the viewer—the artist’s images bear the marks and material traces of the process of their own creation. Less definitive visual statements than a series of painterly gestures, Jackson’s works exist in a state of perpetual flux—at the cusp of completion, yet decidedly open-ended.
About the Artist
John Reno Jackson
b. 1995
John Reno Jackson is a Caymanian-American painter. He studied at the Slade School of Fine Art (UCL) and received his MA in painting from the Royal College of Art, London (2025), where he was the recipient of the Sir Frank Bowling Scholarship. His work explores the possibilities of painterly expression through varying abstract investigations of his chosen medium. He has exhibited at Tern Gallery in the Bahamas and held a solo exhibition, A Heron Amidst the Storm, at the National Gallery of the Cayman Islands in 2022. His work is in the permanent collection of NGCI, where it has also featured in various exhibitions such as Island of Women: Life at Home During Our Maritime Years (2020), Reimagined Futures – 2nd Cayman Islands Biennial (2021) and The People’s Collection – A 25-Year Cultural Legacy (2022).
