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Poppies Print

David O'Connor

United Kingdom

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK

New flower paintings This is a still life flower painting in acrylic on canvas board. The canvas is 61 x 61 cm (frame size 75 x 75 cm) in inches 24 x 24 inches (frame size 29.5 x 29.5 inches). Framed in a cream coloured distressed/aged hardwood frame ready to hang. This group of new still life paintings follow on from my previous still life work but explore the use of flattening and pattern making found in my landscapes. I wanted to push the vibrancy and the feel good factor in the composition, colour and patterns. The series is inspired by a very wide range of artists including Van Gogh, Paul Cezanne, Andre Derain, Euan Euglow, Paul Nash, Degas, and Larry Rivers. Also contemporary artists such as Bruce Mclean, Anna Hymas, Alison Dickson, Chloe Lamb and Jonas Wood Japanese art is also inspirational in the way it flattens and unfolds perspective. Ultimately they are made to be joyous and life affirming in the most simple way.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Print:

Giclee on Canvas

Size:

16 W x 16 H x 1.25 D in

Size with Frame:

17.75 W x 17.75 H x 1.25 D in

SHIPPING AND RETURNS
Delivery Time:

Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

My studio is in the Wylye Valley village of Heytesbury where I have lived for 30 years. I came to Wiltshire to discover the world created by the painter Paul Nash and inspired by his work have begun to create my own Wiltshire. I first saw Nash’s work in my school 6th form library on the Wirral and fell in love with his photographs and paintings of the rolling chalk Downland and ridges topped with Bronze Age Barrows and Beech wood clumps. His photographs of the Avenue at Avebury captured the depth of antiquity in a landscape I just had to be in. I want to create paintings which say without doubt….. “THIS IS WILTSHIRE”. The colours in my work are bold and striking, attempting to capture the memory of sun-drenched summer walks across the plain, along the Ridgeway to Avebury, across the undiscovered West Wiltshire Downs and down the Wylye Valley. This ancient and mystical landscape is now overlaid with the geometry of modern farming however the past is not far from the surface. As I walk I collect Neolithic flint tools and I am struck by the awareness that I am walking the same soil as the people who built Stonehenge. Colour and pattern are what excites me as I try to create a balance between what I see, what I recollect and the wish to construct something more than simple representation: “His landscapes are based in Southwest England in particular Wiltshire and Dorset. They are the perfectly balanced point between abstraction and observed landscape painting. There is the trace of many layers and fine lines within the work, combined with the glorious pallet of vivid greens and sunny yellows making joyous viewing.” Kate Anniss Director Mylo Art. My painting are built up of many, many layers of paint almost like the archaeology of the Plain. I paint, then scrape back through the layers and build up more: constantly constructing, deconstructing, overlapping, obscuring and revealing until the right emotion and composition is captured. As they are based more on emotional memory, the compositions are not planned but evolve in the painting process. My clients identify the paintings with the places not in a literal tree for tree way but in the overall spirit of place which the Romans called Genius loci. It is that spirit of place I am trying to capture. “O’Connor describes his paintings as ‘direct and intuitive.’ His use of colour is fresh and original and his mark-making holds great appeal.

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