A Little Promise by Linking Fingers

Nana Funo

A Little Promise by Linking Fingers, 2009Sign in to view price
Details
Material
oil on canvas
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

The artwork features a dynamic, textural landscape with a distinctive monochromatic palette. The composition is dominated by a striking interplay of intricate organic shapes and patterns, creating a sense of depth and movement. The subject matter depicts a surreal, dreamlike forest scene, with the silhouette of a figure subtly emerging from the intricate foliage. The artwork's style and technique are characterized by a bold, expressive use of line and gestural brushwork, reflecting the artist's unique approach to rendering the natural world. The overall context suggests a contemplative exploration of the relationship between the human form and the natural environment. ...

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Artist
Nana Funo
B.1983, Japanese

Nana Funo revolves around painting and carved wooden panels, exploring the intersections of memory, nature, and personal experience. Her compositions often depict figures, animals, flora, and elements of writing, blending fantastical imagery with intimate reflections drawn from everyday life. Funo’s scenes evoke a dreamlike quality, balancing narrative, pattern, and abstraction, and inviting viewers into spaces that are at once whimsical and contemplative. Central to her practice is a meticulous, layered process. She applies muted acrylic tones onto wooden panels and carves the surface with a heated pen, building gradations and texture with gesso and successive layers of paint. This method creates depth, surface variation, and a tactile resonance that mirrors the layered complexity of memory and experience. Her approach emphasizes both precision and spontaneity, transforming ordinary motifs into intricate, kaleidoscopic environments. Living and working in Shizuoka, Funo draws inspiration from daily life, natural landscapes, and the interplay of the personal and the universal. Her art offers meditative reflections on perception, emotion, and the poetic potential of everyday moments. ...