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Volume 18
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Artist Profiles -
Volume 18
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Raw and powerful to behold, the paintings of Adrian Lascom act as a catalyst for existential contemplation. Layer upon layer of paint is hurled, spattered, dripped, and smeared across the canvas in bold strokes of color, with a process that focuses on an intuitive creative progression. His works are characterized by painterly self-exploration with a psychological twist, allowing the work to surge seamlessly from the unconscious in “emotional snapshots,” as he describes it. There is an understated complexity to the paintings; highly textured overlying areas are specked with color from the vivid layers below. The abstract style is only feigned; each work is actually an exploration that seeks to illustrate the powerful workings of personal history on the human consciousness. “When painting, there are no unintentional marks, only conscious and unconscious,” states Lascom. “I attempt to bypass the conscious mind, the cerebral censor, and gain access to hidden thoughts and images created by the unconscious.” |
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Artist Profiles -
Volume 18
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As Bill Adés’s love for painting grew, so too did the physical scale of his work. This is because it is the substance with which he works—be it oil, tempera, acrylic, or polyurethane— that is his focus. He experiences painting as a medium in the truest sense: as an intermediary between himself and the viewer. “Whether there is a subject matter in the work or it is in the abstract realm, each stroke, each dab of color is not only telling the viewer about the artist but also about the him- or herself,” he says. “It is an ongoing connection. If one tiny stroke or the shade of one of the colors would turn out differently, the painting would convey an entirely new message.” |
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Artist Profiles -
Volume 18
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In the blink of an eye you might miss one of these lightning fast installations by exciting contemporary artist T. Mikey. 3DUV, an acronym for “Three Dimensional Ultraviolet”, is a unique and compelling art form of the artist’s original design utilizing a multi-planar approach to image making in order to create a highly convincing photo realistic illusion of three-dimensional space and form. Hand painted in phosphorescent materials the entire image is self-illuminating in neon colors when lit by the invisibly installed ultraviolet lighting concealed in its stunningly constructed light box style frame. A masterful execution of scale as these 8 foot panoramas encompass your peripheral vision in an electric dreamscape of curiosity that you feel like you could reach out and touch. |
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Read more... [T. Mikey]
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Artist Profiles -
Volume 18
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Alan Mercel-Sanca’s lush and intricate drawings often focus on woodland and forest scenes. Shying away from major landmarks, Mercel-Sanca draws attention instead to small local sites, or to those comparatively unknown spaces around famous areas. Born in the United Kingdom, the artist is heir to the nation’s tradition of working directly in front of nature in graphite or in watercolor, and his work has strong affinities with that of historical luminaries J.M.W. Turner and Thomas Girtin. Like his eighteenth- and nineteenth-century predecessors, Mercel-Sanca has traveled widely, creating work based on locations in British Columbia, Italy, and Japan. The artist’s virtuoso technique allows him to capture stunning nuances of light and shade, and to recreate on paper varied effects of sunlight on objects as diverse as leaves, rocks, bark, and water. His works frequently radiate light, and are suffused with a sense of mystery and magic. Denying any intended message or abstract concept behind his works, Mercel-Sanca seeks only to capture his subject and the emotions he feels in front of it. He “sincerely believes, with deep conviction, that to be an artist is a True Spiritual vocation, and that the more the artist is inspired by the awesome Nature of Creation (its Harmony and Splendour), the greater will be the fluency and evocative character of his or her creative work.” Alan Mercel-Sanca’s art reflects this reverence for nature and all its diversity. www.alanmercelsanca.com
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Artist Profiles -
Volume 18
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Patrice Goubeau creates highly individualistic and fantastical paintings with subjects that often stem from his inventive imagination. Mythical hybrids populate magical landscapes full of bright lights and unidentifiable forms. Deeply influenced by the legacy of Surrealism, the distant influence of De Chirico is clearly felt in many of Goubeau’s scenes. Like the Italian master, he is interested in the idea of suspended time, stating, “All my paintings tell a story where ‘Suspended Time’ is present. Everything becomes possible, no borders exist between life and death, dream and reality, black and white, sun and shadow.” Goubeau attempts to reach a higher plane of consciousness in his works, seeing painting as a form of meditation that can allow access between the past, present, and future. He allows himself complete freedom in exploring esoteric themes, and many of his works feature strange architecture or spaces, positioning viewers as voyagers to these foreign lands. His focus on stone buildings is also a reference to his father, who was a mason who renovated castles and passed on his love of well-honed craftsmanship to his son. Encouraged by his father, Goubeau uses his art to “try to fight against sadness and fate.” Goubeau was born near the Chateaux de la Loire in France in 1951 and has shown extensively in Montreal. www.goubeau.com www.pgoubeau.com |
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Artist Profiles - Volume 18
Feature Articles - Volume 18
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