Posts Tagged ‘Paintings’

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

Contemporary Art: the Importance in Today’s World

December 29th, 2009

Contemporary art has gained a lot of importance in modern households. It has become one of the most sought after household items and it has been recognized in every aspect of human life. Modern art is nowadays a tool for interpersonal communication and has far reaching effects. The increased number of persons visiting exhibitions and art galleries clearly signifies the rise in contemporary art importance. It is an indicator about the awareness of art amongst the people.

 

Large appreciation of masses and easy understandability are the main reasons of success of modern art. The accessibility of these arts are easy as it is released in numerous copies and forms like disks, e-books etc. Original paintings, which were hard to get in the old days, are now easy accessible through art galleries, which eventually increased the number of admirers of modern art.

 

However, contemporary art critics raised an argument that some arts should be reserved for certain group of people. They argued that true appreciation of art can come from people who can understand modern art. In other words, only an artist can understand the value of an art. It is true in some cases, but an artist would like to get appreciation from as many people as possible. Contemporary art will continue to express publicly understood ideas so as to get the maximum appreciation from the public.

 

There are various ways of acquiring modern art today. Online auctions are one of the ways where by abstract arts, oil-based painting, and impression arts can be purchased. But before you make a purchase, it is important that you do some homework on what art you would like to collect. One way of collecting required information is to make extensive research work in the internet. Other sources include libraries, magazines etc. which can give you your desired information on art.

 

But you have to be careful when buying a contemporary art work as there are lots of fakes in the market. But you can appoint an appraiser for the art you want to purchase. Online art auctions generally keep a track record of the art seller’s sales history and can help you determine whether the seller is a reputable person.




By: Sam D’Costa

About Isa Genzken Exhibitions and Paintings at Saatchi-gallery

December 27th, 2009

Isa Genzken was born on 1948 in Bad Oldesloe and currently lives and Works in Berlin, Germany. Urlaub possesses a ridiculous elegance, caught between high design and holiday festivity. Drawing from the Minimalist concept of objective abstraction, Genzken’s work straddles the spheres of formalist purity and narrative interpretation. Entrenched in the process of making, Genzken’s work is the result of her own intimate interaction with materials, tempering the procedure of formal decision-making with the spontaneity of imaginative play. Kitsch objects such as plastic leaves, figurines, and an oversized wine glass carry their own associative references while operating as neutral compositional elements of shape, colour, and texture. Urlaub exudes escapist fantasy while retaining a refined order, culminating as surreal microcosm of caprice vs. rationale.

Isa Genzken EDUCATION:

1993-1997

• Düsseldorf Art Academy

1993-1975

• Studied Art History and Philosophy at the University of Cologne

1971-1973

• Berlin University of Fine Arts

1969-1971

• Hamburg College of Fine Arts

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2005

• Der Spiegel 1989-1991: Isa Genzken, The Photographers Gallery, London, UK

• Kinder filmen, Galerie Daniel Buchholz, Cologne, Germany

New Work, David Zwirner, New York, NY

2004

• Wasserspeier and Angels, Hauser & Wirth, London, UK

• China Art Objects, Los Angeles, CA

• International Art Prize, Cultural Donation of SSK Munich, Munich, Germany

2003

• Isa Genzken, Kunsthalle Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland [catalogue]

• Empire Vampire Teil II, Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus Kunstbau, Munich, Germany

• The Wrong Gallery, New York, NY

2002

• Haare wachsen, wie sie wollen, Skulpturenprojekt Galerie Meerrettich (Josef Strau), Berlin, Germany

• Museum Abeiberg Mönchengladbach [catalogue]

• Wolfgang-Hahn-Preis, Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany

2001

• Galerie Daniel Buchholz, Cologne, Germany

• Magnani, London, UK

• Science Fiction/Heir und jetzt zufrieden sein, AC-Saal (with Wolfgang Tillmans),

• Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany [catalogue]

Conclusions:

Isa Genzken has been making a name for herself with an oeuvre including sculpture, photography, film, video, works on paper and canvas, collages and books.

What to Do Next. . .

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

Selected Jeppe Hein Exhibitions and Paintings at Saatchi-gallery

December 27th, 2009

Jeppe Hein’s works address us individually; though, importantly, we might not have asked them to. Hein delights in apparently serendipitous events, suspending common sense laws of cause and effect and conjuring up scenarios in which, in direct response to our presence, seemingly sentient behaviour is coaxed from inanimate things.

selected GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2005

Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles

MCA, Chicago

2004

Wohnseifer / Hein, Union Projects, London

Moving Parts, Kunsthalle Graz / Museum Jean Tinguely Basel

Performative Installation, Siemens 2004, Galerie für zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig

A Secret History of Clay: From Gauguin to Gormley, Tate Liverpool

Gegen den Strich, Kunsthalle Baden-Baden

Quicksand, De Appel, Amsterdam

What did you expect?, Galerie Jan Mot, Brussels

2003

Hein, Schellberg, Wohnseifer, Schnittraum, Köln

The straight or crooked way, Royal Collage of Art, London

Biennial of Ceramic in Contemporary Art, Albisola

Auf eigene Gefahr, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt

Performative Installation, Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig

2002

Ingrepp, Uppsala Kunstmuseum, Uppsala

I promise it`s political, Museum Ludwig, Köln

Fuzzy, Galleria Minini, Brescia

Inside / Outside, Galerie für zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig

Hell, neugerriemschneider, Berlin

No Return. Positions from the Collection Haubrok, Museum Abteiberg, Mönchengladbach

2001

Changes possible, Kiel

Biennale di Venezia

Arbeit, Essen, Angst, Kokerei Zollverein, Essen

Frankfurter Positionen 2001, Frankfurt

Strategies against Architecture II, Pisa

Neue Welt, Frankfurter Kunstverein

Take off, Arhus Kunstmuseum

In some of his pieces he articulates a dialogue between the work itself, the person encountering it and the gallery space in which it is sited – though this is a conversation for which one is wholly unprepared. Works of this kind imply a wry relationship both to the Minimalist sculpture of the 1960s and to those forms of institutional critique that sought to question the authority of the museum or gallery space. Yet Hein’s practice does not really fit either tradition – the mode of address and playful tone is at odds with, for example, phenomenological interpretations of Minimalist sculpture, in which the viewer participated in the work but as a relatively abstract presence.

The other wall shows what I chose to create in the end. With this exhibition I’ve been thinking about the gallery’s situation, and how it presents and represents art. How artists can go into an exhibition space and use it to stage their art. My job has been to find out how I, with the room as frame, can make my work function best, while maintaining a relationship with the room itself.

what to Do Next. . .

Read more Articles about Jeppe Hein http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/jeppe_hein. htm

Ian Davis Exhibitions and Paintings at Saatchi-gallery

December 26th, 2009

Selected Works by Ian Davis are at first he worked on Factory in 2006 Acrylic on canvas,secondly he worked on Doledrum in 2006 Acrylic on canvas and also great more works done by Ian Davis.

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2007

• Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York

2006

• The Great Divide, Acuna-Hansen Gallery, Los Angeles

2000

• Art One Gallery, Scottsdale

• Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City

1998

• Eight Million Stories, New School for the Arts, Scottsdale

• Art One Gallery, Scottsdale

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2004

• Miscegenation, The Chocolate Factory, Phoenix

• Merry/Peace, Sideshow, Brooklyn

• Born in the U. S. A. , Galerie Art One, Zurich

2003

• GRA Gallery, New York

• Fugitive Art Space, Nashville

2002

• GRA Gallery, New York

2001

• Above Ground, Dam, Stuhltrager, Brooklyn

1999

• Horror, 381g, San Francisco

• Art One Gallery, Scottsdale

• Three Painters, 381g, San Francisco

1998

• Whole Gallery, San Francisco

1997

• Four, 111 Minna Gallery, San Francisco

1996

• Artworks Gallery, San Francisco

1995

• Transitions, Arizona State University West Gallery, Phoenix

1994

• Painting and Sculpture, Step Gallery 9999, Tempe

• Joe Robbins, Ian Davis, Matthew Kruse, Step Gallery 709, Tempe

What to Do Next. . .

If you want any information about Ian Davis or looking for his paintings please visit us on http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/ian_davis. 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.

Artist Molly Larkey’s Art Work and Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery

December 24th, 2009

Molly Larkey’s The Revolutionary playfully incorporates elements of formalist abstraction with its symbolic subject matter. Constructed from a variety of materials, Larkey gives her sculpture a rainbow treatment of brightly coloured paint, each rough hewn component compiling as a topsy-turvy monument, inciting both Modernist art history and hippie psychedelia. With her theatrical assemblage, Larkey frames these disparate ideas as humorously dysfunctional; relating the dynamics of power with the festivity of grass roots endeavour.

BIOGRAPHY

1971

Born Los Angeles.

Lives and works in Brooklyn

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2007

Project Room, PS1 Contemporary Arts

Center, Long Island City

2004

Webspace @ Artists Space, New York

2003

The End of You Is The Beginning of The End of Me, PS122 Gallery, New York

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2007

M*A*S*H, curated by Omar Lopez-Chahoud & Amy

Smith-Stewart, New York

Tropical Punch, Jack the Pelican Presents, Brooklyn

2005

LineAge, The Drawing Center, New York, NY

Off My Biscuit, Destroy Your District!, Samson Projects,

Boston

Atomica, Esso Gallery & Lombard-Fried Fine Arts, New

York

Désert de Retz, curated by David Hunt, Audiello Fine Art, New York

2004

Black Milk, Marvelli Gallery, New York

2003

Terrible Beauty, Satelliteâ (a division of Roebling Hall), New York

2001

An Exhibition of Works by Contemporary Women Artists:

Kiki Smith, Cecily Brown, Jane Hammond, Elizabeth Murray, Susan Rothenberg, Molly Larkey, Lisa Yuskavage, Marisol, Bobbie Greenfield Gallery,

Santa Monica

2000

New York Area MFA Exhibition, Hunter College, New York

MFA Thesis Exhibition, Rutgers University, New Brunswick

1999

Size Matters, Gales Gates et al, Brooklyn, NY

Mirror, Mirror On the Screen, Momenta Art Gallery, Williamsburg

The Y2K Solution, Rutgers University, New Brunswick

1996

Incestuous, Threadwaxing Space, New York

Molly Larkey’s The Revolutionary playfully incorporates elements of formalist abstraction with its symbolic subject matter. Constructed from a variety of materials, Larkey gives her sculpture a rainbow treatment of brightly coloured paint, each rough hewn component compiling as a topsy-turvy monument, inciting both Modernist art history and hippie psychedelia.

Read Entire Article about Artist Molly Larkey paintings and artwork at The Saatchi-Gallery http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/molly_larkey. htm

Jacob Hashimoto Exhibitions and Paintings at Saatchi-gallery

December 22nd, 2009

Jacob Hashimoto was born on 1973 lives in New York City and Verona. Jacob Hashimoto cuts rice paper into small geometric shapes and glues the shapes to delicate wooden frameworks, which he attaches to black fishing line and ties to long wooden pegs at the top and bottom of his rectangular, wall-mounted, waterfall-like hangings. The pegs are evenly spaced from side to side across the top and bottom of the piece.

The artist ties six roughly overlapping layers of shapes onto each peg, creating a dense, kaleidoscopic multi-level field in which a given shape may be visible or hidden, depending on the angle of view. The hanging seems to move as we walk past. But is it a sculpture or a painting? Where is the figure? Where is the ground?

Hashimoto’s show, titled “skip skitter start trip vault bounce — and other attempts at flight” opened at Chicago’s Rhona Hoffman Gallery in mid-November, but closed early when everything sold. The show featured one ceiling piece along with seven wall works, constructed of like elements but with varying content.

Slip into Vapor could almost be a landscape. Measuring five feet high and four feet wide by 7. 5 inches deep, it is composed of paper ovals, each roughly four inches wide, which are mounted on X-shaped frameworks and suspended between 13 wooden pegs at the top and 13 below. White and blue ovals, suggesting clouds and sky, comprise the upper half of Slip into Vapor, while darker ovals in the lower half could be rocks, soil or vegetation. The artist collages long slices of green paper-like grass onto some ovals and puts fanciful decorative designs on others. As the viewer walks by, these peep out to surprise and amuse.

Face Ache at Ice Cream Social measures eight feet square and employs hexagon shapes with a mad variety of designs. Dark and dense above and light below, this piece seems to sparkle, bubble upward, and move in all three dimensions, but it is never busy because the artist alternates decorated and plain white hexagons, both across the face of the work and in its layers. Hashimoto begins by making wooden frames from tiny sticks, tying them together with thread, and affixing translucent rice paper to them. If he wants color or a design, he collages it onto the paper shape — nothing is painted. When a framed shape is ready, he dips it in acrylic resin for strength. After creating a large inventory of these elements, he selects shapes of different size and design, and strings them on nylon line, which he employs because it does not stretch. Now he is ready to tie the strings to the pegs. Hashimoto also exhibited Super Abundant Atmosphere II, a ceiling-hung work made of pale forms that suggest billowing clouds. Apparently one of the “attempts at flight” in the show title, this piece brought the sky indoors and almost seemed ready to levitate the gallery.

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2007

• Mary Boone Gallery, NY

2006

• Studio La Città, Verona

2005

• Superabundant Atmosphere, Rice Gallery, Rice University, Houston

• Skip Skitter Start Trip Vault Bounce – and other attempts at flight, Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago

2004

• Bloom, San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose

• Altadena, Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma

2003

• The Nature of Objects, Studio la Città, Verona

2002

• Studio la Città, Verona

• Silent Rhythm, Galleria Traghetto, Venice

• Finesilver Gallery, San Antonio

2001

• Giant Yellow, Patricia Faure Gallery, Santa Monica

• Big Mountain, Patricia Faure Gallery, Santa Monica

2000

• Carte Blanche à Hélène de Franchis, Galerie Lucien Durand-Le Gaillard, Paris

• Project Room, Patricia Faure Gallery, Santa Monica

• Giant Yellow and Other Structures, Galerie Lucien Durand-Le Gaillard, Paris

1999

• Armada, Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago

• Infinite Lightness, Studio la Città, Verona

• Galleria La Nuova Pesa, Rome

1998

• Infinite Expanse of Sky, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago

• Project Room, Patricia Faure Gallery, Santa Monica

1997

• Ann Nathan Gallery, Chicago

1996

• Sky Canopy Installation, Ann Nathan Gallery, Chicago

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2005

• Italian Feeling, XIV Quadriennale di Roma, Galleria Nazionale d’Atre di Roma, Rome

2004

• White, Patricia Faure Gallery, Santa Monica

• Artseasons, Cas Pellers, Palma de Mallorca

• Jen ne regrette rien, Studio la Città, Verona

2003

• Structure, Patricia Faure Gallery, Santa Monica

2002

• Intermezzo, Studio la Città, Verona

• Officina America – ReteEmiliaRomagna, Palazzo dell’Arengo, Rimini

2001

• Phoenix Triennial, Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix

• Conceptual Color: In Albers’ Afterimage, San Francisco State University, San Francisco

2000

• Made in California NOW, Boone Children’s Gallery, Los Angeles County Museum of Art West

1997

• Perennial, Carleton College Boliou Art Gallery, Northfield, Minnesota.

• Headless, William Cordove and Jacob Hashimoto, Lineage Gallery, Chicago

1996

• Thesis Exhibition, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago

• Young Americans of Asian Ancestry, Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago

Conclusions:

Jacob Hashimoto show, titled “skip skitter start trip vault bounce — and other attempts at flight” opened at Chicago’s Rhona Hoffman Gallery in mid-November, but closed early when everything sold. The show featured one ceiling piece along with seven wall works, constructed of like elements but with varying content.

What to Do Next. . .

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

Online Art Galleries Transform The Hi-End Oil Paintings Industry

December 21st, 2009

Over the years, online businesses have grown to unbelievable heights. So much in fact that many brick and mortar street stores and vendors are becoming obsolete. In 2001 the Wall Street Journal reported many mom and pop stores in the optometry market were losing out big to web-based suppliers able to provide similar eyewear at half the cost to consumers, same with the travel industry, where local travel agents gave way to online behemoths such as Expedia and Travelocity. Seven years later, that trend has carried over to other markets such as the wall art industry. OverstockArt. com, one of the web’s leading producers of reproduction oil paintings, has reported many of its buyers come from brick and mortar art galleries around the West coast. The company believes many of these private buyers turn reproduction work around in their stores for profit. ”It’s often hard to differentiate between one of our art reproductions and the original,” says OverstockArt. com’s Amitai Sasson. “That’s why we outsell a lot of our oil paintings directly to local galleries. Many clients that walk through their doors can’t afford million dollar originals, so they add our art reproductions to their collections, and append a few extra zeroes on the end of the price tag. “ Sasson says he’s not unhappy with the trend, but that consumers shopping in galleries should be aware of the tactic. ”Many of the galleries know that art purchase is emotional, spur of the moment decisions. People fall in love with the painting and take it home. However, it’s always good to check online before making a purchase,” he said, clicking through a list of some 20 or 30 street galleries his company has sold to in the past year. Many Bush-era economy art connoisseurs are even turning to the online world of reproduction art instead of buying at galleries, simply because the price is good and the product is just like the real thing. Mary Moon, a resident of Missoula, Montana has turned away from local galleries because gallery prices are just too high to pay right now. “I can buy four or five paintings online for the price of one piece at a local art gallery,” she says. “I’ve seen a lot of originals in person and the reproductions are very, very accurate. Of course they’re not the original, but they’re hand painted, textured and they look great. “ In gallery-style fashion, OverstockArt. com allows buyers to view art in the frame on a wall in cyberspace, and is now offering incentives like eco-friendly frames made from scrap molding and sawdust. ”It’s almost just as good as seeing it in a gallery, you can find the perfect frame to match your selection and you can even read experiences of past purchasers,” he said. Sasson doesn’t believe the reproduction industry will ever completely take over the gallery market, but companies like Overstock Art will always offer a great alternative, especially when money is tight. ”Some people will always prefer to buy art in their local gallery, simply because it is an emotional buy; however, if they’d take the time and look through online, they might find the same paintings and a much better price,” Sasson states, . “A lot of people just want something that looks great that they can look at everyday and love. That’s what we specialize in – making that happen. ”

Will Fowler Exhibitions and Paintings at Saatchi-gallery

December 17th, 2009

Will Fowler was born on 1969 in Winston-Salem and currently lives and Works in Los Angeles. Will Fowler’s plethoric patterned canvases are mesmerising in their intensity. Drawing association to 20th c masters such as Dubuffet, Pollock, and Miro, Fowler approaches painting as purist pursuit, recycling and quoting from his own lexicon of gesture, mark-making, and iconography. Often taking years to complete, Fowler’s paintings refuse to resolve as totalities, but rather dazzle with their cacophonous overabundance of energy and contradiction. In TBD, Fowler’s enmeshed motifs compile with vivacious tension, each dot, square, and triangle vying for individual recognition; the solidity of his geometry further unsettled with casual intuitiveness of painterly gesture.

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2007

• White Columns, New York

• David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles

2004

• Don’t Eat Yellow Bricks, David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles

2001

• Galerie Hohenlohe und Kalb, Vienna, Austria

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2006

• Dereconstruction, curated by Matthew Higgs, Gladstone Gallery, New York

• Cloudbreak, Hiromi Yoshii, Organized by David Kordansky, Tokyo, Japan

• (keep feeling) fascination : recent abstract painting in Los Angeles, Luckman Gallery, Cal State L. A. , Los Angeles

• Hotel California, Glendale College Art Gallery, Glendale

• Concepts from Painting, curated by Martin Prinzhorn, Ar/ge Kunst Galerie Museum/Galleria Museo, Bolzano, Italy

2005

• Beyond the Painted Horizon, Bakersfield College Gallery, Bakersfield

• Sugartown, Elizabeth Dee Gallery, New York

2003

• Inaugural Exhibition, Golinko Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles

• Paintingshow, Austrian Art Studio, Chicago

2001

• Will Fowler and Aiko Hachisuka, Hot Coco Lab, Los Angeles

2000

• Upward, not Northward, Storage Gallery, Los Angeles

• Scale, Galerie Hohenlohe und Kalb, Vienna, Austria

1998

• Raw Hide, Zolla-Lieberman Gallery, Chicago

• Polymorphous Memorialus, Post, Los Angeles

Conclusions:

Initially appearing frenetic and consuming, Will Fowler’s layered paintings insist upon perception as an investigative, not passive, process.

What to Do Next. . .

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