Owen Gray's work is a vision of a surface. He paints an
overview of a floating world filled with boats, pods,
insects of giant size -- as a matter of fact Gray really
has no use for day to day proportion, things of highly
different magnitude are juxtaposed in a world that
seems to thrive on overcrowding and pushing things
aside to take their place in an intense arena.
His present work has evolved from the expressionistic
or apocalyptic landscape he accomplished in the
past. Somehow this has led him to his new vision that
might be a metaphor for our own natural environment
that has gone wild. Certainly this work is a call from
the wild first dreamt of by Théodore Rousseau.
Tigers and snakes populate this undulating surface
that one can almost feel bobbing and heaving.
As well this vision has afforded him a very lush
painting style in which riches are
built up of painterly strokes over laying each other
into a Monet-like surface as color rebounds and echoes
from within and from underneath. His flattened shapes
and spatial savvy betray a modernistic training. There
are few painters around that can match Gray's painterly
skills, one that brings a painterly vision to so
complete a conclusion. Gray's work is visionistic,
complete and done in the highest of contemporary
painting styles.
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