While they often resemble large - scale collage, Kim Fisher's systematically painted canvases are created through a process of
layering oil on linen.
Not exact matches
In CHARLIE works are juxtaposed with paint
layered and stretched
on linen, lace, canvas and jersey, to assemblages and objects made of glass - and carbon fibers; gesso and clay,
oil - and acrylic paint, carbon -, glass -, aramide -, or Dyneema fabric, crocheted, knitted, weaved and
layered.
He creates
layered and colorful
oil paintings with wax medium
on both
linen and canvas.
On unstretched
linen, he
layers oil and acrylic paint in thick and uniform quantity, but then strips and sands the surface of the painting to lay bare, in erratic patches, the
linen's surface and fibers.
Employing
oil, acrylic gouache and ink
on canvas or
linen, the artist builds coats of intensely hued pigments and then deconstructs the surface; creating translucent
layers which evoke space and dimension.
Melding East and West, Su Xiaobai draws upon the artistic heritage of his native China and modern and contemporary Western art to produce evocative, abstract paintings, composed of
layers of
oil paint and lacquer
on squares of
linen and wood.