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The Parasitic Disco Cell. Painting

Oliver Perry

United Kingdom

Painting, Acrylic on Wood

Size: 47.2 W x 39.4 H x 1.2 D in

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$6,650

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About The Artwork

Cells are the basic building blocks of all things Disco. They are very rock and roll, very techno. You can feel it in your fingers and subsequently you can feel it in your toes. The body is composed of trillions of Disco Cells that generally lay dormant. They become increasingly active towards the end of the week. Culminating in frenetic activity late Saturday and early Sunday. You can blame this on the boogie. Disco Cells provide the structure for the body to take in the beat, they are a slave to the rhythm, and we all know rhythm is a dancer. They take in the light, feed off the tune and convert decibels into uncontrolled, unsynchronised, unchecked energy. They provide specialised functions, allowing the body to throw unimaginable shapes even for a tiny dancer. Disco Cells contain the body’s hereditary material and allow the reimagination of moves best forgotten. Disco Cells never know when to call it a night. Disco Cells have many parts, each with a different function but that's a bit scientific at this stage. Human Disco Cells react to various external properties both good and bad. Disco Cells need no encouragement.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Wood

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:47.2 W x 39.4 H x 1.2 D in

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Born in 1973 in London I am an artist and that is all that matters. Colour is the way forward and a metamorphic approach to the figure is my take on the world today. So, what are those odd little figures all about? I found a new phrase recently, ‘Psychological Cubism’ and I think that sums up what I’m going on about rather nicely.   So Cubism in its purist form views things from multiple angles, giving you a 360 (almost topographical) view on a single plane. I do the same thing with psychologically fractured subjects.  So I take the extremes of human emotion, and create expressive, fragmented figurative works that shows minds and bodies gripped by an overwhelming inner fear. A kind of forewarning about the fragility of the flesh and the solitude of humans in the face of technical progress. The paintings come about almost by accident, a provocation, a journey into the dark energy of the subconscious. This lingering mania and disorder igniting in our minds our own stories of the absurdities of modern life. Letting us search for the demons buried deep inside, while dragging the carcass of our prejudice and hatred behind us. Echoing the raw disturbance that bubbles under the surface of society.  So I look at the anxiety, depression and uncertainty that stems from the constant pressure to present our ‘best life’. In a world preoccupied with technology, where we are connected to thousands, yet loneliness is commonplace amongst the likes, the follows, the hashtags. I seek new visual paths to unsettle the viewer, pushing what they are comfortable with. While the paintings maintain a hint of accuracy, they flit between controlled precision and unabashed exuberance, and there’s always an awkwardness to entering the paintings that provides an emotional rawness, a more elemental form of self expression that feeds off the nervous system in pure undiluted imagination. And then I wrap them in colour. Geometric Abstraction. Squares, circles and triangles, the other side of what I do.  A long time ago I asked for some advice on where my work was heading and was told I was answering (quite proficiently) a question that was asked 70 years ago, and that I should do something more contemporary. So I did. A quick google search revealed contemporary art as a series of squares, triangles and circles, often interlinked with a bit of a scribble and maybe a patch of colour. So I embarked on a journey to see where it would take me.

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