First published to accompany Piano Nobile's exhibition, John Golding: Finding the Absolute, which ran in conjunction with the Kings Place music program focusing on Minimalist music, curator and author Dr Charlotte de Mille addresses the overlaps between music and art in Golding's early works. John Golding's paintings from the mid 1960s focus on questions of form, scale and materiality - the works grouped in this exhibition can be considered as repetitions on a theme as shapes recur in different colors and contexts. These aesthetic resonances with subtle differentiations orchestrate a rhythmic dynamism in composition, and across the space of the exhibition as a whole. Evident in the corresponding music program, Minimalist compositions originate from similar concerns with theme and variation, the processes and language of composing through subtle variation in repeated motifs, micro-tonalities, and almost hypnotic evocations of time and space. Golding's paintings share the excitement of innovation and exploration of the mid 1960s born of a common historical context in which modes of expression were reinvented.