Peel Off the Paint #265

Haruna Shinagawa

Peel Off the Paint #265, 202330 x 40cmSign in to view price
Details
Material
acrylic on canvas
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This abstract artwork features a striking visual contrast between the monochromatic, wrinkled surface and the sharp, metallic edges framing it. The dominant palette of muted grays and blacks creates a sense of depth and texture, with the crumpled material evoking a sense of fragility and ephemerality. The minimalist composition and the artist's use of unconventional materials suggest an exploration of the dichotomy between the natural and the artificial, inviting the viewer to contemplate the relationship between form, structure, and materiality. This piece appears to be part of the artist's ongoing investigation into the nature of contemporary art and the boundaries of traditional media. ...

Peel Off the Paint #293
Artist
Haruna Shinagawa
B.1995, Japanese

Haruna Shinagawa expands the limits of painting, turning canvases into tactile, three-dimensional forms that engage both the eye and the body. She works with acrylic paint layered on peelable polyethylene cloth, creating compositions that are simultaneously abstract and material-driven. By peeling, folding, and manipulating the painted surfaces, Shinagawa introduces sculptural depth and emphasizes the materiality and process inherent in her work. Her approach interrogates the relationship between form, color, and texture, blurring the line between painting as image and painting as object. She often works with layering and subtraction, allowing surfaces to reveal traces of prior gestures, creating a dynamic dialogue between presence and absence, addition and removal. Shinagawa’s work reflects an attentiveness to the sensory and experiential qualities of materials, inviting viewers to engage with both the physicality of the objects and the conceptual implications of her processes. Through this interplay of abstraction, tactility, and transformation, her practice offers a nuanced exploration of material, space, and perception. ...

Haruna Shinagawa: Artworks