Posts Tagged ‘Canvases’

About Artist Stef Driesen Art Work and His Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery

December 31st, 2009

Influenced by the works of Northern European Old Masters, Stef Driesen’s paintings often incorporate references to art history through their colours, compositions, and subject matter. Through this lineage, Driesen draws from his own personal experiences to create beautifully expressive canvases evoking both emotional and physical sensuality. Using his own sexual identity as a platform for investigation, Driesen’s work expands upon the theme of man and nature: each canvas conceals a human form within his abstracted landscapes, creating a symbiosis between the romantic sublime and mortal carnality.

Using a fleshy, earthy palette, Driesen’s canvases blur the bounds between tangible and psychological space. Watery grounds, delicate brushwork, and intensified tones lend a sense of dream-like terrain, translating materiality of paint into ephemeral fields redolent with contemplation, desire, and loss. In their poetic articulation, Driesen’s paintings convey the intimacy of the human condition, rendering it equally fragile and heroic. Watery mountain scapes and dramatic skies frame ambiguously figurative foreground elements. Soft pinks and flashes of azure punctuate dark canvases highlighting rivers through the picture plane and revealing landscapes beyond. Ultimately Stef Driesen’s compositions expand space, opening up an imaginary dimension into a world full of the theatrical and fantastic.

Stef Driesen draws inspiration from the compositions, colour palettes, and themes explored by these Old Masters, and is inspired by the way in which they used all of these elements to project a vision of life in their time, political, religious, romantic or otherwise. Watery mountain scapes and dramatic skies frame ambiguously figurative foreground elements. Soft pinks and flashes of azure punctuate dark canvases highlighting rivers through the picture plane and revealing landscapes beyond. Ultimately Stef Driesen’s compositions expand space, opening up an imaginary dimension into a world full of the theatrical and fantastic.

What to Do Next. . .

If you want any information about Stef Driesen or looking for his paintings please visit us on http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/stef_driesen. htm

Martina Steckholzer – Paintings – the Saatchi Gallery

December 25th, 2009

Martina Steckholzer uses as a source for her paintings, video footage which she films in exhibition halls, museums, art fairs and artist’s studios – all places where art is seen or made. The filming is sometimes random where she moves the camera around the space without looking through the lens and sometimes more specific when she points the camera at something she finds interesting. In both cases, her purpose is to catch images hidden from our usual gaze – images that could only be seen through the lens of the camera and caught on the still of the video footage. Martina Steckholzer’s paintings offer a poetic ambience suggesting an infinite nothingness of space. Working from video footage filmed in art galleries, air fairs, studios, and museums, she isolates frames that capture the in-between spaces, unusual angles, and overlooked vantages of familiar generic places. Translated into paintings, these images become dislocated into virtual fields: flat canvases projecting abstracted illusions of line, shape, and tone replay the experience of gallery within the gallery, mirroring the hallowed white cube as sublime aesthetic.

After identifying a single frame from the video, she isolates the image and uses it as the basis of the painting. Although she stays with the main structure and image in the video frame, the paintings are never graphic and it is important to her that they maintain a painterly quality. The viewer is left with a feeling of uncertainty and is never quite sure where or how the paintings are made – why are some abstract, some more figurative? In many there are figurative clues alluding to architectural space, such as in, Chromogenic 2005, but the perspective and fragmented space is difficult to identify. In others there are clearer figurative elements such as, Maybe we Should 2005, a painting made from the image of a landscape photograph. These are punctuated by purely abstract images such as Artist’s Body 2005 (from an image of a roll of film). The titles of the works are also from the video footage and taken from text that appears in the film of the space – maybe signs, labels, titles – not always relating to the image in the painting but always appearing in the film from which the image was taken. Martina Steckholzer’s Neon uses only grey hues to further minimalise her architectural subjects; as the recognisable melts away through delicate layers of paint, only the empty inference of space remains. In Neon, Steckholzer uses the malleable quality of her medium to reflect phantasmal tricks of light, her graphic image dissolves into subtle hand-made gestures. Cut through with black forms, Neon gives the sensation of both solidity and weightlessness, creating an ephemeral expressionism from the cold rationality of photographic media.

About Artist Peter Peri Art Work and His Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery

September 30th, 2009

Peter Peri’s abstract paintings resound with a dislocated and ephemeral ambience. Transcending the apprehension of perceptible space, Peri’s astringent compositions oscillate between both macro and microcosmic conceptions of scale. Emerging from and enmeshed within abyssal black grounds, faintly tinted cilia and floating orbs suggest molecular structures or cosmological configurations, converting the precision language of science into visualisations that are poetic and sublime.

With titles such as Bloodsucker, Slab Block, and The Hearing Forest And The Seeing Field, Peri’s canvases offer portentous suggestions, extracting a disquieting mysticism from their sparse pictorial fields. Within the pristine contours of his diagrammatical motifs, Peri interrupts the ascetic sterility of his surfaces with minute traces of intimate intervention. In areas the pitch density of his veneer spontaneously bubbles over impasto under-painting or erodes to leave an oil-stained effect; while delicately rendered lines and arcs shift imperceptibly in tone, some vanishing into nowhere, others interceding with trailing drips of paint. Through this subtle mediation, Peri’s work entrances with a rarefied elegance, creating a highly articulate abstraction that is both analytical and synesthetic.

The word that springs to mind looking at these images is holistic not a particularly fashionable one to use in art criticism, with its echoes of New Age marketing or the kinds of artists who still think it’s worthwhile pursuing quasi-religious giganticism. Yet the idea of holism put snappily by the Penguin Dictionary of Modern Thought as the thesis that wholes, or some wholes, are more than the sums of their parts in the sense that the wholes in questions have characteristics that cannot be explained in terms of the properties and relations to one another of their constituents seems apt in Peri’s case. On a purely formal level (if there is such a thing) they oscillate between microscopic and macroscopic levels, old-fashioned studies in opticality.Against unbleached paper the texture of pumice stone each hairline bulks out into an undulating graphic wormery that tickles the eyes. Back away, and elementary shapes begin to constitute themselves cancerous tumours, rectilinear slabs, or the occasional graceful arc redolent of an architectural detail. Some of these follicle stylings amass themselves into more readily identifiable representations; an exotic looking headrest, say, or an ornate ceremonial religious prop.

These forms are positioned awkwardly on the page, like cress seeds sown on damp tissue, left free to grow. So fibrous are these drawings that I almost feel the urge to shave them. And such a peculiar choice of imagery Roman Catholic reliquaries, ethnographic trophies, sleek Modernist graphics.

What to Do Next…

If you want any information about Peter Peri or looking for his paintings please visit us on http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/peter_peri.htm




By: Saatchi-gallery