27 Views
2
View In My Room
Painting, Oil on Canvas
Size: 30 W x 30 H x 1.5 D in
Ships in a Box
27 Views
2
Artist featured in a collection
With a palette knife, Iris scooped swaths of oil paint from her palette onto the canvas. Using her fingertips, she meticulously pushed and pulled the details of the moonscape into place. Entitled "Moonbloom," the painting presents a surreal night landscape illuminated by a bright full moon. Inspired by Henri Rousseau's work, the artist brings a whimsical touch to the foliage, featuring an ambiguous red flower at the center of the composition. Succulents sprout from the forest floor where orange poppies grow, intermingling with palm fronds and a bloom reminiscent of hydrangeas.
Oil on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
30 W x 30 H x 1.5 D in
Not Framed
Yes
Ships in a Box
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a box. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
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Iris Scott (b.1984) grew up in Maple Valley, Washington on what she describes as a “one-family hippie commune”. She and her sister spent evenings listening to their mother, a writer, tell epic tales about the anthropomorphized lives of the family’s pet parrots, lizards, cats, goats, and rabbits—with wild coyotes appearing in the stories as special guest stars. Iris’ father, a custom cabinet maker, worked in a shop attached to the house, and Iris absorbed how a woodworker manifests their ideas with their hands. Iris continues the family’s storytelling tradition of magical realism, like her mother, and emulates her father by building the worlds she imagines with her hands. Scott’s college years were spent in Florence, in the same centuries-old halls where Raphael, Michelangelo, and Da Vinci worked. In her mid twenties Iris moved to a tiny apartment overlooking a rainforest outside of Kaohsiung, Taiwan. There she stumbled upon finger painting when a serendipitous lack of clean brushes prompted her to finish a painting with her fingertips. In that moment she recognized how fingers could scoop oil paint better than brushes, and overnight she committed to leaving her brushes behind. Scott worked exclusively as an oil finger painter from 2010 to 2020. The artist now blends all techniques when she paints, incorporating anything from brushes to palette knives. Recently Iris has begun diving into another tool of mark-making: high pressure air. Look for new cellular patterns in her work, these unique marks are another invention of hers which she calls “air painting.”
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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