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oil on canvasAmanda Wilkinson
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This abstract painting showcases a vibrant and dynamic composition of bold colors and organic shapes. The canvas is filled with a harmonious blend of pastel hues, including soft blues, greens, and oranges, creating a sense of movement and depth. The artist has employed a painterly technique, with visible brushstrokes that add texture and a sense of spontaneity to the work. While there are no recognizable elements or symbols, the overall impression is one of playful experimentation and a celebration of color and form. This piece likely reflects the artist's intention to explore the expressive potential of abstract painting, inviting the viewer to engage with the artwork on a purely visual level. ...

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WP320
Phoebe Unwin
Artist
Phoebe Unwin
B.1979, British

Phoebe Unwin fluidly uses oils, acrylics, pastels, watercolours and graphite in her sensorial works, carefully selecting her materials to best reflect the mood or emotion of the chosen subject matter. Never working from direct observation or photography, Unwin is principally concerned with painting what “something feels like, rather than what it looks like”. Fragments of figuration allow audiences to almost exactly recognise the plant, décor, vehicle or textile Unwin had recreated from her imagination. The translucent painterly quality and the amorphous bleeding of blues, pinks and yellows generates a cloudy sensation that echoes processes of memory or recollection. This deployment of colour and observation of tone is reflective of the colour work of Mark Rothko, while Unwin’s aqueous brushstrokes bow their heads to the Post-Impressionists. When looking at the works of Unwin, the viewer is utterly transported to a particular sensation through her intimate impression and understanding of a specific time and place. The image itself may be unclear, but its emotion is sensuously translated. ...

Phoebe Unwin: Artworks
Forefoot
Phoebe Unwin
Forefoot, 2023
80 x 70cm
Anorak Window
Phoebe Unwin
Anorak Window, 2023
70 x 50cm
Butterfly
Phoebe Unwin
Butterfly, 2022
90 x 80cm
Encounter
Phoebe Unwin
Encounter, 2019
60 x 50cm
Envelope
Phoebe Unwin
Envelope, 2019
50 x 40cm
Pitch
Hair
Clip
Glass
Field
Phoebe Unwin
Field, 2018
183 x 153 x 2.5cm
Sunstretch
Phoebe Unwin
Sunstretch, 2018
183.4 x 153.5 x 2.5cm
Ascent
Phoebe Unwin
Ascent, 2018
183 x 153 x 2.5cm
Machine in the Garden
Phoebe Unwin
Machine in the Garden, 2018
54 x 65cm
Osmosis : Petal
Phoebe Unwin
Osmosis : Petal, 2020
28 x 20cm
Osmosis : Roses
Phoebe Unwin
Osmosis : Roses, 2020
20 x 13.5cm
Osmosis : Wall
Phoebe Unwin
Osmosis : Wall, 2020
25.5 x 18cm
Amanda Wilkinson
Gallery
Amanda Wilkinson
London

Amanda Wilkinson opened her gallery in November 2017, having been a partner in Wilkinson Gallery, and brought with her the artists that she had worked with since 2003. Most of these internationally renowned artists had their first solo UK exhibition at the gallery: Joan Jonas and Shimabuku in 2004, Sung Hwan Kim in 2007, Jimmy DeSana in 2009, and Laurie Simmons in 2011. The program has also introduced younger artists such as Heman Chong, Phoebe Unwin, Dorota Gawęda and Eglė Kulbokaitė all of whom have solo exhibitions in public institutions this year. Amanda Wilkinson is a trustee of the Derek Jarman Estate and is the sole gallery who represents the work. The program continues to highlight key historical artists who are little known to the wider art world, including Paolo Gioli, Ketty La Rocca and Margaret Raspé and will introduce new artists to the program in 2020 in keeping with the gallery’s experimental and cross-generational approach. The gallery has presented four Feature booths at ArtBasel in the past , featuring six artists from the program. Eight out of the twelve artists represented by the gallery had solo museum exhibitions in 2019/2020. ...

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