30 Views
2
View In My Room
Fine Art Paper
10 x 10 in ($75)
White ($80)
30 Views
2
Artist featured in a collection
"HIS PARADISE GARDEN" - Landscapes 2018-2019 by Rombout Oomen (1975) "Artist Rombout Oomen's father spent the first 10 years of his life (1942-1953) in concentration camp in the Dutch East Indies, and experienced the ensuing war of independence. This experience has a lasting impact on his existence. Now, for over 30 years he has been building a garden, which is actually a reverse concentration camp, a paradise. A place without barbed wire and misery. Remarkably, the garden has become an accurate reflection of his mind: an almost impenetrable forest that keeps him safe and alive. It is a heavenly place, which at the same time has an horrific origin: escaping deprivation and humiliation. From a series of small and intimate works, a larger triptych has emerged. Based on that work, the idea has taken hold of painting the garden "life-size" as a panorama piece. This will take place in autumn of 2019 Artistically, the series can be described as fairly classic and (auto) biographical, whereby the art of painting is determined, rather than the concept. Form and atmosphere of the works are purely based on personal experiences. The series visually depicts Oomen's view of the garden and its reason for being. Since 2011, Rombout Oomen has been the care taker of that domain, where he helps build and maintain. ”
2019
Giclee on Fine Art Paper
10 W x 10 H x 0.1 D in
15.25 W x 15.25 H x 1.2 D in
White
Yes
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Netherlands
The work of Rombout Oomen (Amsterdam, 1975) finds itself on a cutting edge of opposites. The compositions of Oomens paintings seem to be inspired by the period of the Enlighten- ment. But in the performances of its scenes, cool rationalism is the only absentee. The light that shines in his work is flaming and dangerous. The people portrayed entered somewhere in the eighteenth century at Jacques-Louis David’s revolutionary and thrilling environment. Perfumed, well cut and fit, they began celebrating a decent and enlightened ball. In Rombout Oomen’s work, they finish possessed, stuffed and tired without illusions in a bacchanal where they never found the exit. Unhinged in a circus carousel that led them drunk through the night. No reason, love or salvation remains. Only worn out lust and grotesque concepts, which per- haps give moments of thrill and instant happiness – but do not ask for how long. Rombout Oomen likes to paint in series. Such as his Slumberland Manifesto. Often he chooses large formats – wall paintings, factory size cloths in industrial buildings or just one side of a skyscraper – such as his Swan on the A’DAM-tower on the river IJ in Amsterdam. Work who does not hesitate to rather shout out something, though that call is more ambiguous than you think. As the work of Oomen is expressive, but never noisy. If you take the time to study on his euphoric pictures you will discover somewhere in the depth a hushed poignant element. You’re going to suspect that in the darkest corner of his work a Romantic element lays bare. As has been said: the cutting edge of contradictions
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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