John Maclean
Details
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.This abstract landscape painting features a harmonious blend of vibrant green hues, punctuated by warm yellow and earthy brown tones. The composition is characterized by a sense of depth, with the foreground depicting a lush, textured field and the background suggesting a hazy, atmospheric landscape. The artist employs a gestural, expressive brushwork that conveys a sense of movement and energy, evoking the essence of a rural, pastoral scene. The overall style and technique suggest a contemporary approach to landscape painting, with the artist's intention to capture the emotive and atmospheric qualities of the natural environment. ...
Similar Artworks
John Maclean
Maclean studied at the Royal College of Art in the mid-90s under contemporary British painters such as Chris Ofili and Peter Doig, however his other interests took him in the direction of a career in music and film making. With his film projects on hold during the pandemic and needing a creative outlet for his ideas, Maclean returned to painting after a twenty-year hiatus. Landscapes seemed to be an obvious subject matter for Maclean to work with; growing up in the Scottish Highlands surrounded by dramatic, almost romantic, surroundings, he always had a strong relationship to the natural environment. Landscapes also play a central role in his films: in Slow West, the film Maclean wrote and directed in 2015, and with his forthcoming feature-length project Tornado, the landscape is framed as a protagonist – the same can be said for his paintings, where he foregrounds mountain ranges, trees, rivers, valleys, snow scenes, hills and fields. Maclean enjoys that there is something both generic and specific in the landscapes that he chooses to paint; narratives within the work are elusive and open-ended, allowing the viewer to project their own memories and associations onto the work. In this latest series, there is perhaps more specificity of location, indicated by titles such as America or in depictions of Egyptian pyramids, tropical jungle scenes or when Maclean drifts between seasons, yet the scenes still feel ubiquitous, familiar and easily relatable. Maclean finds his source material (the landscape postcards) via deep-searches online, translating the image directly from his computer screen as he paints onto board. Maclean was drawn to the inconsistency of these vintage postcards, which are often poorly printed in black and white, hand-tinted in unnatural hues and out of register – both painterly and photographic, but lacking authenticity. Maclean enhances or saturates the colour of the original images, preferring to focus on tone over colouration to create textural and dynamic surfaces, a technique borrowed from his film-making. He begins with a small colour detail that ultimately informs the rest of the painting, emanating outwards like a psychedelic hum, edges softening within the painting. This gentle intensification of colour disrupts the naturalness of the landscape scene, placing it at odds with the artificiality of the palette, evoking the slippage of authenticity found in the postcards themselves. ...
John Maclean: Artworks
The approach
LondonThe Approach is co-directed by Jake Miller and Emma Robertson. Located in Bethnal Green above The Approach Tavern, for over twenty years it has operated an internationally recognised programme from its East London base. The gallery is known for discovering artists and establishing their careers as well as making inter-generational curated group shows a strong focus. The list of represented artists includes the Estates of important overlooked female artists Heidi Bucher and Maria Pinińska Bereś, as well as seminal British collage artist John Stezaker, together with established and emerging artists including Magali Reus, Peter Davies, Lisa Oppenheim, Sandra Mujinga, Pam Evelyn, Sara Cwynar, Sam Windett and Caitlin Keogh. Over the years the gallery has operated parallel programmes in additional gallery spaces in London’s West End (The Approach W1) and in Shoreditch (The Reliance). The gallery is currently based solely in its original East End location and continues to expand its programme, showcasing its represented artists in the main gallery space, and both represented and non-represented artists in The Annexe, a smaller, more experimental space at the back of the building. ...