Until the dream is done


Ben Edmunds

Until the dream is done
, 2024102 x 77cmSign in to view price
Details
Material
Fabric dye and acrylic on canvas with carbon fibre artist's frame and suspension kit
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This abstract artwork features a striking gradient of blues and greens, creating a mesmerizing, atmospheric effect. The colors seamlessly blend from a deep navy at the top to a vibrant aquamarine at the bottom, evoking a sense of depth and movement. The minimal, monochromatic composition, with subtle marks or speckles, suggests a contemplative, serene quality. The overall style is characterized by a restrained, abstract aesthetic that invites the viewer to experience the subtlety and nuances of color. This piece likely reflects the artist's exploration of the emotive and evocative potential of color in a contemporary, reductive manner. ...

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Until the dream is done

Artist
Ben Edmunds
B.1994, British

Ben Edmunds (b. 1994, Norwich, UK) creates his colour field paintings by layering mists of fabric dyes, sprayed directly onto washed canvas. Over time, the colours shift and bleed into one another to create a spectrum of gradients across the painting: erasing definite distinctions between green, blue, purple. Using only three dyes: cyan, yellow and magenta, Edmunds is particularly interested in blue as a colour that almost doesn’t exist in nature. It appears in his paintings only as an ever-changing combination of cyan and magenta, something that shifts between sky and the sea. As an open-ended colour, it represents dreaming, exploration and adventure. For Edmunds, painting is an adventure for artists and viewers, drawing from his personal history of sailing, windsurfing and cycling, he frames abstraction as an adventure sport. In 2019, Edmunds registered his company Aspirational Equipment - a pseudo-sports brand for romantics, creating “tools for dreamers”. Under its umbrella of paintings, objects and functional garments, it questions the supposed anti-utilitarianism of painting and asks the question “What can an artwork do?” ...

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