Artists Describing Their Art:
Jerome Perrin - ARTIST STATEMENT Art is the expression of human emotions,it helps to promote culture and preserve our heritage.My style is realism and i enjoy painting landscape and the human figure.Nature is life and whenever i want to paint a landscape scene i visit the forest where it is peaceful and quite.I sit there for a while and observe.Observing nature is one of the most important things an artist must practice.I love to paint and whenever i paint it give me a good feeling of fulfillment.I wish my viewers would share with me these concepts and appreciate the different ways of seeing and saying in the work of art....
Kikuko Sakota - The recent themes of my paintings are imaginative world coming into my mind, while walking in hills and forests. Fresh air, smell of leaves and soils, color of greens, and singing of birds make me recall fairy tales: the witch living in the woods, dwarfs playing music, and so on. It is my bold attempt to interpret invisible but natural miracles into picture planes with my skills focusing on color employment, brushstrokes and composition for those elements. Please check out my website:
Ajit Deswandikar - To begin with, as an artist I always has an inclination towards anything new that was going on around me, which gave me an inspiration to use a different concepts for my paintings. I believe in freedom of expressions, through my creative ideas with experimenting on new styles. In my paintings I explore the images for its fragility and strength which depicts transformation of energy. These paintings are new series which represent a throughout motion and a pictorial representation of exploring individualities. The moment captured on canvas is magnificent journey of simplicity and mesmerizing experience of life. There is however a strong undercurrent of emotion, sensuality ant passion emphasizing on modern globalization in digital age that give immense pleasure. There is simple pleasure of life that depicts bold statements like a new era woman or an innocent smile like a girl on a swing .. At a glance you will perceive a transformation of forms, a glamorous word, and a winning desire .a desire to strive for the magnificent journey in incomparable moving world I have tried to showcase all trends of a traditional as well as modern advancing technology in a sensual manner ...
Nick Pike - ARTIST STATEMENT I recreate everyday urban life into striking scenes, using vibrant colours and stirring movements. Walking everwhere with my eyes open to possible settings, I look to find stories to embellish. Having a strong passion for music and a way it interacts with the mood of the painting, I often create soundtracks to the pieces I'm working on, which also encourages spontaneity. I used to concern myself with making everthing perfect, yet emotions and moods are made of something much more raw. I started to use pallette knives and frayed brushes to lure me in a more expressionist mode. I love it when I'm painting a figure from careful observation and it turns into someone I know and thinking of their characteristics alters the picture. Since moving to the country, I created a body of work immersed in nature greens to seek calm and solitude which I'd been craving for years. Now visiting towns and cities fills me with a renewed curiosity, seeing with the fresh eyes of a tourist. When I find the perfect place, I sketch and take a series of photographs in succession of my 180 degree view, with people moving in and ...
Marcia Dietz - Through the interaction of mark making machines, our relationship with technology, and each other, is investigated. Process and experience rise above the final product. Scientific, sociological, psychological, and artistic discourse flows. Answers produce more questions. All resulting in a better understanding of how we work together individually, in society and with technology. My intention is by clearly seeing the absence of a creative force in the making process we can better understand its presence. Like many experimental works, the "Drawing Machines" creates a unique set of new questions: Where is the art? in the product? in the machine? is this art at all? and knowing the machine has no intention when drawing, why do we still try to see something in it? I prefer to pose and not to answer such questions because for me a good work or art creates a memory, or starts a conversation, a great work does both....
Shoshana Kertesz - In 2003 Shoshana left Hungary and moved to Jerusalem, Israel. She continued to exhibit her artwork throughout Hungary and Israel. The works from this period show an orientation toward biblical and Jewish subjects. In her biblical paintings she uses strong expressions of solemnity and seriousness on the faces to convey the drama of the moment. "I am not concentrating solely on the story itself but mostly on the spiritual response that the story evokes in me". Her more recent works include realistic portraits of great artists, writers, poets, musicians. "I choose my subjects not just based on whom I admire but whom I can identify myself with on certain levels. For me it is also a psychological study, to make a thorough research on my subject`s personality, to dig as deep as possible into their art and to live and breathe who they are in order to bring out the most realistic expression and reflection of their inner and outer being as well as -consciously or not- my own. We achieve the best results in art when we totally identify ourselves with what we want to express. For example if I paint an earring I shouldn`t just look ...