Sandra Gamarra
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Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.The artwork consists of a vibrant, monochromatic landscape scene rendered in a warm, russet tone. Prominent features include a hilly terrain with structures, trees, and figures scattered throughout the composition. The overall style appears to be a contemporary interpretation of a traditional landscape painting, blending realistic and abstract elements. The artist has employed a unique technique, utilizing dripping and gestural brushwork to create a sense of movement and energy within the static scene. The context suggests a commentary on the concealed or underlying aspects of the depicted environment, inviting the viewer to consider the nuances and complexities inherent in the landscape. ...
Similar Artworks
Sandra Gamarra
1972 , PeruvianSandra Gamarra's practice makes reference to cultural production as a construction in balance. The constant use of painting in Gamarra, always camouflaged or hybrid, acts as a mirror that alters the exhibition formats, narratives and the concept of cultural property. In 2002, she created the LiMac, a museum project, in response to the cultural institutional void in Peru.
Sandra Gamarra: Artworks
80m2 Livia Benavides
Lima80M2 Livia Benavides is an art gallery specialised in Peruvian conceptual art. The gallery opened in Lima as a response to a scarce infrastructure for the arts. From then on, the gallery is focused on developing critical discourses on contemporary issues. We are interested in different voices, practices and aesthetics focused on political and social reflection. By promoting the works of established and emerging artists who have influenced the local artistic scene, we intend to introduce new names internationally. The gallery strives to build bridges between the local and international contributing to an interchange that goes beyond borders. 80m2 Livia Benavides advocates for non- conventional exhibitions spaces that transcends the white box experience. With the intend to reach a broader spectrum of the community and to rethink exhibition venues. ...