星空传媒果冻国产入口

High Fidelity 29 New Bond Street High Fidelity 29 New Bond Street
/
This exhibition displays artwork that is born from passionate respect for cultural, art historical or natural phenomena. The subject of these artists鈥 admiration informs the subject of their work. However, they also redevelop these phenomena according to their unique perspectives and aesthetic priorities.

Mitch Griffiths

Mitch Griffiths’ hyper-realism technique display tremendous respect for the 600-year-old tradition of oil painting. Although his technique, style and subject matter are developed from Old Masters paintings of the 16th and 17th centuries, his works include visual references to contemporary culture as he condenses the spirit of our time into the other worldly realms that he constructs.

Andy Warhol

Modernising one of the oldest and most frequently represented motifs in the history of art, Warhol transforms the morbid image of a skull into an instrument within an arrangement of shapes and colours that evoke the ‘disco era’ of the mid-70s in New York. 

Pedro Paricio

Paricio’s painting Fame is a homage to the past: the art historical tradition of representing skulls as a reminder of one’s mortality. However, above all, it displays fidelity to Warhol whose large skull paintings and prints, created through the 70s, display vibrant lively colours.

James Mcqueen

Taking inspiration from a very different source, James McQueen’s monumental canvases combine his appreciation for the humble penguin book design with his admiration for the visual motifs of Damien Hirst and Banksy, to create something distinctly his own.
鈥楲ife moves. Nature evolves. Light shifts. My art captures these changes, and our touch and interaction that elicit response, and help perpetuate the stories I am telling.鈥
Dominic Harris
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image