







4
Archival-grade Materials
Fade-resistant Inks
Professionally Printed
Leak from urinal bowl created this image and the beautiful colour. There are images/art all around in our urban/city environment, but most are missed because we spend so much time looking at our screens/smartphones. If only we took the time to look around us and see the world for all its natural ...
2020
Print, Giclee on Fine Art Paper
Open Edition
8 W x 10 H x 0.1 D in
No
Not Framed
Ships Rolled in a Tube
Calculated at checkout.
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
All Open Edition prints are final sale items and ineligible for returns. Visit our help section for more information.
Ships rolled in a tube. Art prints are packaged and shipped by our printing partner.
Printing facility in California.
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United Kingdom
"To see we must forget the names of the things we're looking at"-Claude Monet Martin Vallis studied Visual Communication at Medway College of Art and Design from 1976-79, moving to London in 1980. After working as a Photographic Assistant to Commercial Photographer Gary Bryan for 3 years, he set up his own studio in Chelsea in 1983, that specialised in high-quality still life photography, in the areas of Advertising, Design and Editorial. Martin also shot stills on TV and Cinema commercials, primarily with directors Howard Guard and Ridley Scott (Alien/Blade Runner/Gladiator). Some of Martin’s clients included, British Airways, BMW, Volkswagen and Selfridges. His style evolved, resulting in tightly- cropped, close-up work, mostly utilising Tungsten lighting, to enhance texture and detail. Two decades later Martin departed from commercial photography, concentrating on his own vision. Throughout his career, Martin’s style has changed, yet there remains the ever-constant preference for simplicity of solitary objects, reflecting texture and shape: less is more. Society may spend time looking for the ‘Big Picture’ whilst missing the ‘Beauty of Simplicity’. He feels it portrays a deeply felt sense of isolation, solitude and emptiness. The artist is eager to conclude he now understands those feelings are more to do with his condition over reality. My work today, is an interpretation of what I see, some series relate to my early childhood experiences, notably, 'Others,' 'Melancholy' and 'Imperfection' My work also has a spiritual content in relation to Buddhism as well as the Japanese expression 'Wabi Sabi.' Both share characteristics of Impermanence, Imperfection, Simplicity, Loneliness, Melacholy, Emptiness and more.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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