The warmth of stones
The warmth of stones

Mary Ramsden

The warmth of stones, 2022170 x 110cmSign in to view price
Details
MaterialGallery
oil on canvasPilar Corrias
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This abstract painting features a vibrant, layered composition of various shades of green, black, and blue. The overlapping shapes and textures create a sense of depth and movement, evoking a lush, naturalistic atmosphere. The artist appears to have used a combination of brushstrokes and sponging techniques to build up the dense, textured surface. While the subject matter is not immediately recognizable, the work suggests a connection to the natural world, perhaps a response to the dynamic interplay of light and shadow within a dense forest environment. The artist's intention may have been to capture the essence of the natural landscape through an expressive, non-representational approach. ...

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In der Nacht der Ferne
Mary Ramsden
Artist
Mary Ramsden
B.1984

Mary Ramsden’s paintings track a ceaseless, ever-supple reckoning with her medium: its materiality and histories, its complex deals with figuration and abstraction, the points where it yields, the points where it resists. Drawing on ways of seeing that are both long-established and acutely contemporary (not least those inaugurated by new technology), there is an archaeological quality to the way she lays down, and excavates, strata of marks and pigments, buried deposits of time and space. With their audacious play of textures, surface and scale, these are paintings that insist on their own physicality, the impossibility of their reduction to mere image. Rather, like us, they belong to the world of objects, a realm of densities and depths. Ramsden has spoken of painting as ‘thinking with the hand’, and her works bear the traces of a restless, embodied cognition. Uncertainty abides, along with persistent reaching for (hard-won) self-actualisation. The intellectual and the sensory are not so much translated as transfused into form and colour. A work’s limit conditions are defined, then tested, and sometimes extravagantly breached. Where depiction is in evidence in these paintings, it has a fugitive quality, as if Ramsden’s marks were not quite willing to be wholly subsumed into the pictorial, preferring to retain a measure of autonomy as an arrangement of pigment on a support. This is a glitch that is also a feature: a way of capturing and sequencing those concrete abstractions, time and space. ...

Mary Ramsden: Artworks
Through to the blue
Mary Ramsden
Through to the blue, 2021
128 x 70cm
“safe, safe, safe”
Mary Ramsden
“safe, safe, safe”, 2021
128 x 70cm
“Then fit our vision to the dark - ”
Mary Ramsden
“Then fit our vision to the dark - ”, 2022
210 x 140cm
"Here we left it"
Mary Ramsden
"Here we left it", 2021
150 x 90cm
Cartomancy
Mary Ramsden
Cartomancy, 2021
23 x 12cm
“A toucan. Maybe a wizard?”
Mary Ramsden
“A toucan. Maybe a wizard?”, 2021
33 x 25cm
Supercell
Mary Ramsden
Supercell, 2021
34 x 29cm
“Tall walk”
Mary Ramsden
“Tall walk”, 2021
23 x 30cm
well up
Mary Ramsden
well up, 2019
200 x 260cm
devil's kettle
Mary Ramsden
devil's kettle, 2019
200 x 230cm
felt
soundproofed as a dream
Mary Ramsden
soundproofed as a dream, 2022
170 x 110cm
The warmth of stones
Mary Ramsden
The warmth of stones, 2022
170 x 110cm
Small Feelings
Mary Ramsden
Small Feelings, 2023
200 x 140cm
come apart in my mouth
Mary Ramsden
come apart in my mouth, 2023
170 x 110cm
Pilar Corrias
Gallery
Pilar Corrias
London, London

Pilar Corrias Gallery is a contemporary art gallery owned by Pilar Corrias. The 3,800 square foot gallery in London's Fitzrovia, designed by Rem Koolhaas, is made up of two exhibition spaces, located in the heart of London's West End. Pilar Corrias opened a second London gallery space at 2 Savile Row in July 2021, designed by London and Oslo-based architect firm Hesselbrand. Since its inception, the gallery has worked with emerging and established artists with the central aim of allowing their work to grow both in terms of production of new projects and the making of new exhibitions. Pilar Corrias now represents a total of thirty-two international artists, two-thirds of whom are female. ...

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