Bari Gotix

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A$3,690

Artwork Details

Medium Oil, Linen, Ready to hang
Dimensions 80cm (W) x 54cm (H) x 3cm (D)
Review Stars 21,273 Customer Reviews
Original Artwork
This artwork is one of a kind!
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Artwork Description

Why do we spend so much time looking down? In this work the artist asks you to look up and see the sky and all that is possible. To see the amazing detail of the architecture and appreciate the skill and beauty of it.
The potential for mankind to create beauty is evident in these amazing buildings, and it’s a potential that we all possess.

Artist Bio

Jaq Grantford’s practice is driven by a sustained fascination with faces and the ways people reveal themselves – often unconsciously – through presence, expression, and gesture.

Working across painting and sculpture, and within both portraiture and figurative traditions, Jaq approaches each subject with attentive respect, seeking to balance accuracy with emotional truth. Her works are developed over time, allowing character and complexity to emerge gradually. Whether depicting a public figure or an intimate sitter, her portraits and figurative works aim to convey a sense of lived experience rather than surface likeness alone.

Jaq is drawn not only to individuals, but also to the extensions of human identity: the objects, structures, and environments we create that speak quietly about who we are as a society. A building, a discarded fragment, or a marked landscape can hold as much psychological weight as a face.

Jaq is based in Australia and specialises in fine art, portraiture, figurative work, and sculpture. She holds Signature Status with the Portrait Society of America and is an ARC Associate Living Artist. Her work has been exhibited widely and recognised with major awards, including the Darling Portrait Prize (National Portrait Gallery of Australia), the Archibald Prize People’s Choice Award, and the Kennedy Prize.

Her work is held in public and private collections, including the European Museum of Modern Art (MEAM), the National Portrait Gallery of Australia, and the National Gallery of Victoria.