Blurred Horizons 5

Reproduction Print by Scott Maxwell

Print Size

Framing Options

A$305

Artwork Details

Medium Canvas Print, Canvas, Ready to hang
Dimensions Printed to size: 30cm (W) x 40cm (H) x 5.5cm (D)
Review Stars 21,293 Customer Reviews
Art Print
Art Print
This is a reproduction of an original artwork
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Estimated Delivery Time from SA

Sunday, Jul 05 - Wednesday, Jul 08

Original Artwork's Description

This is an original oil painting on paper by South Australian artist Scott Maxwell

This painting can be easily mounted onto a cradled wooden panel ready to hang unframed, let me know and I can do it. It will take up to a couple of weeks to get it done.

Comes with a certificate of authenticity

What lies beyond the horizon.

Land or sea the horizon speaks to us, it reminds us that there is more beyond. The openness of country evokes feelings of the great expanse of our land, the open skies and ocean vistas remind us that there are other experiences, other people and country beyond that horizon. The view beckons us to explore, to travel to seek out what lies beyond. Many people spend as much time as they can chasing horizons, there is always more to find.

The multiple top and bottom edges of each band of colour or tone are horizons, occurring up and down the canvas. Each new horizon, a new time and place with all of the memories and anticipations that we feel when we cast our minds back or ahead. The layers or bands may represent the life experiences a strata of our time on earth.

Some of the technique is borrowed from the German artist Gerhard Richters squeegee paintings. I've combined this with my own methods and inspirations, my love of abstract landscape and seascape painting.

With the squeegee I blur some of those horizons, I blur the bands of colour and tone that hint at the strata of our lives and life experiences that we stack on top of each other as we travel along our linier lifetime. I think it's a way to show that we don't always see the horizon clearly. For me it's a way to express how I see my own personal horizons and my lifes strata.

This painting can be mounted onto a cradled wooden panel with the sides painted ready to hang unframed. I can organise that if you are interested.

If you want a painting a particular size I'm willing to do commission work. Get in touch with me or the Bluethumb team, no problems.

Artist Bio

I am a South Australian artist born in Adelaide, where I still reside today. I studied art, painting and drawing at O'Halloran Hill TAFE. I've been painting for most of my life. I am a full time painter. I suffer from chronic pain, this is a very large, but not entire influence on my art. Painting helps to give life more substance and meaning, for both myself and the viewers and collectors. I believe there are many mysteries in life that can only be attained through a creative artistic process. Art is a mysterious story with many coloured layers and textured intrigue built on to the surface of the canvas.

I try to not have too much of an idea of what I am going to paint when I sit at the easel, but I do seem to have some recurring themes and styles. They range from fiery intensely coloured artworks filled with heat that represent what's at my core, Stormy dark paintings and muted more earthy tones. I love the landscape and seascape, I love to express that in abstract painting. I also enjoy creating organic surfaces and often these paintings resemble organisms, cells and their environment. These works often represent or are questions about my own mortality as i get older and our very deep connection to the earth we live on. There are also many connections to what happens as a result of chronic pain, what's going on via receptors in the brain, message pathways and chemical reactions, triggers and relief. Change and the ability for things to become something else is a big inspiration, this shows in many different ways. Yet It's really all about the process. Working the materials, creating a surface with texture and depth. During that process the subconscious is accessed and a mystery plays out. Something ephemeral yet with deep connections is revealed and can be worked through and manipulated on the canvas. What the finished creation is becomes somewhat less important to the artist, the process is where it's at, that's my part of the therapy, the learning process.

When people think about how an artwork was made or wonder what it is about it that attracts them, it's a glimpse of the learning and often healing process that the artist went through to create it. There's an opportunity there, something may speaks to you, you may not hear it, but, a thin thread might be there. Without this mystery there is little to interest the artist viewer and collector. Of course art is also to be enjoyed by people, intense colour and design are also important factors. These things bring us more immediate pleasure.

I try to not have too much of an idea of what I am going to paint when I sit at the easel, but I do seem to have some recurring themes and styles. They range from fiery intensely coloured artworks filled with heat that represent what's at my core, Stormy dark paintings and muted more earthy tones. I love the landscape and seascape, I love to express that love and respect in abstract painting. I also enjoy creating organic surfaces and often these paintings resemble organisms, cells and their environment. These works often represent or are questions about my own mortality as i get older and our very deep connection to the earth we live on. There are also many connections to what happens as a result of chronic pain, what's going on via receptors in the brain, message pathways and chemical reactions, triggers and relief. Change and the ability for things to become something else is a big inspiration, this shows in many different ways. Yet It's really all about the process. Working the materials, creating a surface with texture and depth. During that process the subconscious is accessed and a mystery plays out. Something ephemeral yet with deep connections is revealed and can be worked through and manipulated on the canvas. What the finished creation is becomes somewhat less important to the artist, the process is where it's at, that's my part of the therapy, the learning process.
When people think about how an artwork was made or wonder what it is about it that attracts them, it's a glimpse of the learning and often healing process that the artist went through to create it. There's an opportunity there, something may speak to you, it may only be a thin thread. Without this mystery there is little to interest the artist viewer and collector. Of course art is also to be enjoyed by people, intense colour and design are also important factors. These things bring us more immediate pleasure.