Image with crowd scene and central hooded figure hugging himself and holding a candle, with blocks of flats in background. Printed in black ink (Rochat Ex Full Black). In his catalogue essay for Currie's 'The Age of Uncertainty' exhibition in May 1992, Bill Hare describes this print as linking "quite closely with a number of Currie's recent monumental 'Street' paintings. These express the artist's response to his own personal experience of the collapse of the communist regimes in Russia and its former Soviet empire. Apart from the imagery itself, much of the power of the prints lies in the ironic contrast between Currie's depiction of such crowd scenes and the conventional presentation in the history of painting. Traditionally, such scenes of great crowds are a triumphant celebration of public order and civic unity, as exemplified, for instance, in the work of Veronese, Rubens, David, or the Soviet Realist artists. In Currie's depictions, however, the crowd has turned into a mob, a frightening 'manyheaded monster', where individuals terrorise or are terrorised by their fellow citizens. As though to mock the idealism of his earlier paintings which were inspired by Leger and the Mexican muralists, in these recent prints we are presented with a human society much closer to Breughal's 'Netherlandish Proverbs', Hogarth's 'Gin Lane' or Goya's 'Los Caprichios', where the blind lead the blind and man's inhumanity to man seems to know no bounds".
'The Age of Uncertainty' series was the first time Ken Currie had made etchings - an ambitious project for any artist but one that Currie describes as 'a learning process'. His idea was to create as many plates as he could, in order to see how the process worked and what the medium was capable of. Working with Master Printer Stuart Duffin, Currie produced 30 or 40 plates, from which 27 became the final series of etchings. There is not an over-riding narrative to the series but images are linked thematically and are on the same subjects as the artist's paintings of the time. These subjects include ethnic cleansing and the recent Gulf War, plus events which demonstrated the post-Cold War triumphalism of the West, including political developments in Eastern Europe and the fall of the Berlin Wall, which occurred only three years previously.
During the early 1990s, Currie's art was very much affected by these events. In the 1980s he had produced images which showed the self-educated Scottish working class, but the idealism of these pieces made way for work with a darker edge and biting satire which examined social and political injustices and to some extent mocked the idealism of his early work. Goya's prints were also a significant influence on 'The Age of Uncertainty'.
'The Age of Uncertainty' brought some technical challenges for the artist. Currie found the left to right reversal required from working on the plate to the final printed image difficult, as this felt at odds with his style of the time, which he describes as ‘mannered’. He found it very hard to compensate for this reversal initially. Through making these prints, Currie learned how to use aquatint, a process he later used to great effect in a series of prints made at Glasgow Print Studio in 2005-6. 'The Age of Uncertainty' series was exhibited in Glasgow Print Studio's Gallery in May 1992.