NEW FEATURED ARTIST - NICOLAS JORCINO

This week we release a series of limited edition prints from a collaboration with the fantastic artist Nicolas Jorcino.

Nicolas Jorcino is a native of Buenos Aires, Argentina, who has lived and worked in Louisville, KY since 2001. While attending architectural school in his hometown, Jorcino was introduced to painting during weekly sessions at a local master's workshop. He quickly began conducting his own experiments, which led him to become a full time muralist for the next eighteen years. Today his work is still informed by some of the same problems, pursuits and processes of architecture and design; as a social and physical science and also as a fine art. About his work in this exhibit, Nicolas writes, “My formal training is in architecture and urban planning. I began this series of paintings a few years ago while exploring different aspects and similarities between these two disciplines and painting. Identifying light as the primary material of architecture, I looked for a way to present it with the same weight and hierarchy as the concrete structures that control and shape it in the works of some of the masters I admire... In these images, the process is revealed more as an intellectual exercise than a physical execution.”

Nicolas is currently exhibiting at the Carnegie Center for Art & History in Kentucky with another TWFineArt artist and favorite, Rebecca Norton. The is exhibition titled In Between and runs until October 11, 2014.

To see our limited edition print series visit our SHOP.

INSTALLATION NICOLAS JORCINO

NEW ART IN PRINT - Aviva Reed & Greg MacLaughlin

This week we have introduced an exciting new artist to our limited edition print portfolio! Aviva Reed is a Melbourne based visual ecologist who uses her interdisciplinary skills to communicate knowledge of scientific concepts through visual art. Her numerous projects to date include the Gaia Series, inspired by the scientific theory of evolution for the Windgrove property at Roaring Beach, Tasmania. We are so excited to be releasing a limited edition series of these 13 prints. The suite of work tracks the earths evolution from the Pre Cambrian era through to the Paleocene. Each piece captures in gorgeous detail the key features of each geological era. [caption id="attachment_10896" align="aligncenter" width="800"]Gaia No. 10, 2014. Print by Aviva Reed Gaia No. 10, 2014. Print by Aviva Reed[/caption] Also new this week are some wonderful new prints by Greg MacLaughlin. Greg's signature trapezoid has been infused with collage elements and placed in new spatial environments, adding an exciting new dimension to his investigation of shape, form and endless possibility. [caption id="attachment_11065" align="aligncenter" width="800"]Ergo, We Hurt, 2014. Print by Greg MacLaughlin Ergo, We Hurt, 2014. Print by Greg MacLaughlin[/caption]  

Newly Added: Fine Art Prints by Gert Geyer

Yesterday we added a new portfolio of artwork in fine art print by Brisbane artist Gert Geyer. [caption id="attachment_10482" align="alignleft" width="356"]Red House, 2014. Red House, 2014.[/caption] [caption id="attachment_10497" align="alignright" width="348"]Peach House, 2014. Peach House, 2014.[/caption]
Gert is an artist, illustrator, florist and designer whose practice explores form, repetition and the space between the corporeal and the abstracted. She has studied writing and visual communication and her attempts to elevate detail through the exploration of colour and pattern hark back to her roots as a language-based communicator. Gert’s illustrated zines have featured in a National Gallery of Victoria exhibition and her work has been published in the comic anthology Tango. She has curated pop-up exhibitions within domestic spaces and is currently in the process of implementing a site-specific mural in the Redlands. Geyer's minimal, stylized prints are reminiscent of the infamous Alex Katz, with a local, personal flair as she documents the homes of neighborhoods of Brisbane's suburbia. We are excited to be working with her and look forward to seeing her fantastic work in the homes of our customers.

Inside the Mind of the Artist - Paintings by Keren Paz

TW: We’ve known each other for some time now, but it has been a while since I saw your work in person. There seems to have been a gradual departure away from the type of work you were making when we lived in New York. I once got a verbal scolding when I said to Mike Goldberg that the paintings he made on the Italian Coast during the summer had a different quality about them to the work he made in New York City - I still believe it to be true despite what he said ;-).  I’m therefore hesitant to ask, but how much has the environment in Israel influenced the evolution of your work? Screen Shot 2014-08-15 at 6.17.34 PMKP: I believe that the geographical and political environment we live and work in has a great influential force on the work, as well as the personal and psychological dispositions of the artist. By geographical I mean both natural and architectural scenery as well as a specific quality of light. if you look at the classical northern European paintings you find a unique  quality of light you won't find elsewhere, and the reason to that is the natural light that these great painters knew. Mike Goldberg was part of the New York school of abstract expressionists, who were very much influenced by the writings of Clement Greenberg. One of these painters' endeavors was to create an arena of painting that is exclusive, in which subject matter can only be painting itself, with regard to its history alone. Personally I think that painting cannot release itself from pre knowledge of vision. however, that ideology may explain the verbal scolding coming from Mike... TW: Absolutely, Mike was a purist in that sense but I totally agree with you. The environment around is inescapable, how could it not influence both his perception and use of space and color. I think in retrospect he might look down and agree. Was that a clap of thunder? KP: A few months after I moved back to Tel Aviv, I felt I had to find new approaches to my work, to come up with a different technique than the one I was developing in NY. I decided to put paint aside for a while and was only drawing for a few months, until I felt that one of the drawings needed a space [see painting below]. That space was very much derived by the seascape seen from my studio window, and the beginning of a long painting period which led to the work you are about to show in your gallery. TelAviv Landscape TW: Your earlier paintings were quite process based, with a lot of spontaneous gestural drawing and layering, where you would scrape away the paint with a large pallet knife or squeegee to build the surface. The resulting abstractions had visual references to the photograph or negative. It looks as through the paint brush has returned in your more recent works. Would you say that the content, or subject matter of your later work has driven the type of materials and tools that you use? That being said, has the content of the work become more interesting to you than the process? KP: It is true that the process or the technique was much more evident and extroverted in the older work, and that the decisions that were made while working were more spontaneous because of the rapid nature of the work. However, the full content always reveals itself through the work, and I never know where the work on a painting would lead me to. It is always the process that really creates the work for me, not so much an idea or prevision, even though every painting begins with one. I think that along my evolution as a painter what mainly changed is the temper or tempo. I would say that the Temper of the older work had more to do with hysteria and hunger whereas now it is stiller. Also, the older work was more physical and it's substance more evident, almost like sculpture, the new work is lighter in substance and tends to the gaze more than to the body. TW: I know your art vocabulary is very extensive. Who have you been looking at recently? Who have you found interesting and/or inspirational? KP: Last June I took part in a project by Gilad Ratman that represented Israel at the Venice Biennale and thus was able to look at the fabulous work of a Belgium painter named Thierry de Cordier  that was shown there. His dark seascapes stayed with me ever since. also, a few years back i saw Peter Doig at the British Museum, which i found very interesting and I believe had touched my work. [caption id="attachment_10455" align="aligncenter" width="577"]Thierry de Cordier Seascape - Thierry de Cordier[/caption] [caption id="attachment_10454" align="aligncenter" width="587"]The Milky Way - Peter Doig The Milky Way - Peter Doig[/caption] TW: The horizon has always been a part of your work in some form or another, plastically and or conceptually. I remember a beautiful piece that you did a long time ago (during the more process driven period) where the canvas was seamed together to create an horizon. The horizon has become much more a part of these later paintings. What is it about the horizon that interests you? KP: Wow i really can't believe you remember that, it's fantastic! You are right, the horizon carries a great metaphorical meaning for me thanks to its liminal quality. To me It represents the meeting place and conciliation of endless dichotomies such as mind and matter, knowledge and faith, catastrophe and salvation, etc etc. I think that the clash of such dichotomies lies at the root of our being and is a source of great wonder as well as deep agony and frustration. TW: Your newer paintings have a darker, more brooding color pallet in contrast to the lighter, quite joyous paintings from Series 1. Has this been conscious and where do you feel the work is heading? KP1 KP: True, the work has lately become less joyous and more dramatic. The conscious decision, which of course is only part of the full picture, was to examine the roll of color in my work. I wanted to see to what extent the work relied on color, and if I only painted monochromes, when or if  the use of color became a necessity. Also, to me there is something very strong about the vast white fields. They carry the quality of a silent and ambiguous desire craved to be fulfilled, and this is also a good metaphor to end with regarding where the work is heading; It is an ambiguity that I desire to reveal. [caption id="attachment_10476" align="aligncenter" width="708"]Untitled 2014 - Keren Paz Untitled 2014 - Keren Paz[/caption] We are thrilled to be exhibiting Keren's work. For a great art experience, be sure to visit the TWFineArt Gallery in September and see it in person!

Introducing the Art of Gert Geyer

I recently had the pleasure of meeting South East Queensland artist Gert Geyer. In addition to being a fantastic bubble blower (witnessed at the Brunswick Street mall re-opening) Gert combines an illustrative touch with the whimsy and spontaneous creativity of the fine artist to create these magical, graphic works of art. The border between illustration and fine art has always been a difficult one to define. If I was to define it though, I would say that illustration tells a very specific story by communicating ideas or meaning with visual tools. Fine art on the other hand is quite an open ended exploration of the visual language. Gert is a hybrid of the two disciplines. She skillfully draws reference from the world around her, then utilizes text and hard edge imagery to create beautiful pieces reminiscent of the work of Stuart Davis and Alex Katz. There is a lovely 1970's quality to the imagery, with a great play on space, pattern and color. We will be collaborating with Gert over the coming month to create a unique series of limited edition prints and are looking very forward to having a very talented Brisbane local on our roster of contemporary international artists! Gert Geyer   Gert Geyer Art