The Hidden Place

September 1, 2012

Charles Weed

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 10:39 am
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Ahem, hello again…

 

Charles Weed is an American painter who studied in Minneapolis and Florence.  He’s married to Louse Camille Fenne, who is also a gifted painter.  I’m personally more drawn to his landscapes, but his figurative work is very strong too.  He’s managed to carve out a distinctive look to his work without, it seems to me, forcing a style for the sake of it.  A feathery shimmering light unifies his figurative and landscape work.

 

 

 

Website

 

May 30, 2010

Daniela Astone

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 5:53 pm
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Website

November 19, 2009

Donald Jurney

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 9:55 pm
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Donald Jurney’s landscapes show a very clear reverence for the work of the Barbizon and Hudson River Schools.  Some of his compositions are much like Daubigny’s, with solid design drawing one’s eye between feathery trees, gently rippling water and skies heavy with atmosphere.

His wonderfully muted colours have a brilliant but subtle vibration that keeps his work from ever looking dull as many low-chroma landscapes do.  Instead one feels the thickness of the air and the trickling flow of light.

There’s a great sense of focus in his work too.  Often it is a tiny detail, a small area of strongly contrasting colour or value, that rings out clear like the triangle in an orchestra, bringing a touch of poetry to the broader areas.

Website

October 11, 2009

Alejandro Decinti

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 1:50 pm
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Alejandro Decinti is a Chilean painter whose work I’m undecided about, but still want to post.  His paintings from a few years ago display a similar approach and tonality as the work of Antonio Lopez Garcia, as can be seen in works like this one:

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Then his paintings show an increased interest in paint for paint’s sake.  The still life below of materials seems to play with the tension between materials and representation, with the blue of the bucket merging into the flat blue wall, thereby flattening the image.  This sort of thing is reminiscent of Manet’s work, and a tribute to the Bar at the Folies-Bergere shows Decinti’s interest in him.

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Thereafter his work becomes more involved with its own material qualities, with abstract marks breaking contours.  His compositions have also become increasingly unsettling and often creepy.

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Love his early work. Undecided about his later stuff. Opinions? Check out his website and see what you think.

September 29, 2009

Travis Schlaht

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 4:45 pm
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Travis Schlaht is an instructor at the Grand Central Academy, married to Kate Lehman, studied at Water Street Atelier and has a show coming up at John Pence Gallery, so as the ‘classical realism’ scene goes, he’s got the credentials.  Oh and his paintings are pretty nice too.

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I must admit, as far as subject matter goes, i’m not particularly excited.  It’s his paint quality that fascinates me, his marks having their own independent interest, yet never disrupting the illusionism, always subservient to representation but present enought for one to enjoy the interaction between surface and subject.  That may not be the most revolutionary thing ever, but I don’t mind at all, I’d rather quality and sincerity to ‘originality’.

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Gallery

September 22, 2009

Brett Amory

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 5:35 pm
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Another compelling painter of urban life today, Brett Amory.

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There’s something of Kanevsky about some of his marks, but his compositions feel a bit more illustrational with their clear opposition of figure and (often white) ground.

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I can’t say I know anything about him, but I like his work, and if you like it too you should go to his show in San Francisco.

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Website

September 15, 2009

Jackie Anderson

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 2:01 pm
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Scotting painter Jackie Anderson has produced works of such fragile delicacy, being so faint and stripped down in colour, that they make one slow down to really look at them.  Ethereal and ephemeral forms, overlapping observations and subtle tonal variations are combined with compelling compositions that seem to capture something of the impersonal nature of urban interaction.

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I’ve never actually seen any of her work ‘in the flesh’ so to speak, but I would imagine they could be…well, it’s hard to avoid the word ‘haunting’ really.

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If you like her work I’d recommend you check out Nicholas Uribe too, specifically his work from a few years ago.

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Website

August 22, 2009

Michael Kareken

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 5:05 pm
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Finding beauty in the rough and mundane industrial world of scrap heaps, Michael Kareken’s textural paintings and charcoals are worth checking out.

Magnet

CompressedMetal

Scrap Engines 3 copy

Website

June 10, 2009

Nicola Hicks

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 2:20 pm
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Nicola Hicks is known primarily for her extraordinarily textured sculptures of animals, people and hybrids thereof.  Here charcoal drawings and etchings have a brilliant balance between rough physicality and disintegrating ephemeral line.

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There size is almost overwhelming, yet there is a delicacy in both the marks (despite their display of bravura) and in the material.  Thin brown paper was simply tacked to the wall of the gallery when I last saw here work.

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There is some truth in Flowers Gallery’s claim that her work “often combines charm and menace in equal and sometimes devastating measures”.

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Gallery

April 1, 2009

Anthony Scullion

Filed under: Contemporary Painters — thehiddenplace @ 11:19 am
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Reminiscent of Giacometti’s paintings, as well as Francis Bacon’s, Anthony Scullion’s figurative paintings is well worth having a look at.

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Gallery

Gallery 2

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