Posted by Fabio 23 May 2011
Described by Richard Dorment (The Daily Telegragh) as a ‘remarkable young painter’ Henry Hudson is rebellious in his treatment of traditional forms. His medium has predominantly been plasticine; in preparation he melts it over a heater turning it into a gloop which he can manipulate with his fingers as if it were oil paint.
www.henry-hudson.com
Posted by Fabio 23 May 2011
Norwegian artist Jan Freuchen (1979) lives and works in Oslo and Berlin. Shown here is “F.A.Q.” from 2010, 95 x 80 cm C-print, mounted on aluminum.
Posted by Fabio 21 May 2011
Clay sculpture featuring human hands and cotton thread by Israeli artist, Ronit Baranga.
Posted by Fabio 21 May 2011
The paintings, sculpture and collage of Annie Morris are obsessive, energetic and thoughtful. She is above all else a mark maker who uses the simplest of tools to make striking, often haunting images.
Posted by Fabio 20 May 2011
Laurence Owen uses painting to mix the mythic and the mundane. Alluring yet unsettling, each work contains a world filled with hollow pleasures and veiled truths, depicted in a style that looks deceptively naive.
Posted by Fabio 20 May 2011
Amdam Bainbridge’s work uses model-making as a departure point for the production of detailed pencil drawings. Through drawing he is able to explore aspects of working and middle class suburbia along with the possibilities of representation in art.
Posted by Fabio 20 May 2011
Artist Christian Hidaka is known for a distinctive visual vocabulary made of broad brush-strokes saturated by Technicolor palettes, recalling psychedelic design culture over the past forty years. His landscape paintings depict archaic and futuristic landscapes that combine styles and narratives whose conventions are partly inherited from Japanese prints. read more
Posted by Fabio 19 May 2011
Nikos Moschos was Born in 1979 in Herakleio, Crete. He was first taught to draw by his father, Takis Moschos. He studied at the Athens School of Fine Arts from 1997 to 2003. Painting under the guidance of H. Botsoglou and Photography under M. Baboussis. His work has been acquired by the Benaki Museum, the Frissiras Museum, the Viannou Library and various private collections. read more