276 Views
21
View In My Room
Painting, Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 39.4 W x 31.5 H x 0.8 D in
Ships in a Box
276 Views
21
Artist featured in a collection
Although close to each other, the chairs are facing in different directions, as if avoiding each other’s gaze. The space in between the objects has an undetermined sense of depth that is uncanny. The starkly contrasting colours almost create a sense of nausea. The viewer is unable to fixate on a single point in the room, constantly being drawn towards another object. Boxes, vases, a chest drawer and a bag are scattered around the space. The various chairs signify different characters within a person. They are unable to reconcile with each other, causing a state of confusion. The painting is a psychological landscape of someone who is sifting through conflicting aspects in her life in order to determine her core values.
2019
Acrylic on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
39.4 W x 31.5 H x 0.8 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
Ships in a Box
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Germany.
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Germany
Wei Tan (b. Malaysia, 1991) is a painter and sculptor based in Berlin. With a background in music composition, she completed her Master's degree in Music Technology at New York University. In summer 2015, while developing work on image-based experimental sound art, Wei Tan plunged into the world of abstract painting – first collaborating with her teacher Gina Bonati in a small East Village apartment, then experimenting on her own, drawing inspirations from the great Abstract Expressionists and today’s cross-disciplinary artists. Since then she has worked and exhibited in New York, London, Kuala Lumpur and Berlin. Wei Tan’s art began as an urgent act of self-revelation through improvisation. Each painting is a journal entry where thoughts and memories are purged. Like making soup, materials are thrown onto the canvas and mixed together through spontaneous gesture. Wet paint, powdery pastels and viscous oil clash into each other creating haphazard geographies. Often a period of mindless doodling is carried out before the painting emerges with an unexpected coherence. The process of automatic drawing allows thoughts from the subconscious to emerge and form a narrative. In her later work, Wei Tan developed an interest in more tangible and figurative forms. This first manifested as paintings that exist between the real and the abstract, where quasi real-life objects – resembling chairs, boxes, tables and vases – float in a sea of abstract colours and forms. These objects became characters of their own, each emanating a unique emotional signature. In her latest Chairs Series, each chair seems to carry the lingering presence of a human being. The objects in the room evoke various feeling states ranging from excitement and playfulness to melancholy and longing. These rooms are a peek into the emotional landscape of the painter, as well as a mirror in which the viewers can catch a glimpse of themselves.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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