Patricia Fernández
Details
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.Visual Elements: The artwork features a minimalist composition with a large, dark arc-shaped form that dominates the canvas. The frame is made of a warm-toned wooden material that contrasts with the muted colors inside. A series of geometric patterns and shapes are arranged below the central form, creating a sense of balance and symmetry. Subject Matter: The central element appears to be a stylized representation of a lunar eclipse or crescent moon, evoking a sense of the natural world and celestial phenomena. The geometric patterns and shapes below may represent symbolic or abstract elements. Artistic Style and Technique: The artwork exhibits a modernist aesthetic, with a focus on simplicity, geometric forms, and a limited color palette. The materials and techniques used, such as the wooden frame and the precise arrangement of shapes, suggest a careful and deliberate approach to the composition. Context: This artwork may be reflecting the artist's interest in exploring themes of nature, astronomy, or the interplay between organic and geometric forms. The minimalist style and symbolic subject matter are characteristic of the modernist art movement, which sought to move beyond representational depictions and explore the essential qualities of artistic media. ...
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Patricia Fernández
1980 , SpanishPatricia Fernández merges aspects of portraiture, still life and sculpture in her expansive practice. Geometric patterns, symbols and coordinates are meticulously engraved into wooden surfaces or rendered with oils on linen where this precise imagery meets sensuous washes of colour and spectral depictions of moons, stars or hazy sleeping figures. While exploring the contours of cosmology, references to painters such as Hilma af Klint can be seen in Fernández’s oeuvre, being that she brings together spirituality and science. Working with earthy, organic tones, the artist increasingly incorporates found wood in her pieces—with mahogany, walnut and poplar forming the crux of her sculptures or being utilised as frames for the paintings. Time is a central fascination for the artist, as she thinks through the contrasts and peculiarities between geological time, cosmological time, and humanity’s own construction of time passing. Clocks continually resurface as key iconography within Fernández’s work, as well as lunar cycles as the artist tracks individual, personal rhythms against, circadian, astronomical patterns. All at once deeply personal and spectral, Fernández continues to make work which meditates on some of life’s biggest queries. ...
Patricia Fernández: Artworks
Commonwealth and Council
Los Angeles, Mexico CityCommonwealth and Council is a gallery in Koreatown, Los Angeles founded in 2010. Our program is rooted in our commitment to explore how a community of artists can sustain our co-existence through generosity and hospitality. Commonwealth and Council celebrates our manifold identities and experiences through the shared dialogue of art—championing practices by women, queer, POC, and our ally artists to build counter-histories that reflect our individual and collective realities.