Simon Periton
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Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.This visually striking artwork features a dramatic, close-up view of a delicate, abstract flower form. The composition is dominated by bold, high-contrast shapes and vivid colors, including shades of white, pink, and black. The overall design has a sense of ethereal, organic symmetry, with the petals or leaves appearing to radiate outward from the center. The artist has employed a distinctive photographic technique to capture the intricate details and textures of this natural subject, creating a mesmerizing, almost otherworldly visual experience. The artwork likely aims to invite the viewer to contemplate the beauty and complexity of the natural world. ...
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Simon Periton
1964 , BritishSimon Periton (b. 1964) is a British artist living and working in London whose work encompasses painting, sculpture and installation. Marked often by an elaborate and sensuous style, his work reflects influences as diverse as fin de siècle aestheticism, the visual language of punk, cinema, and the occult. Throughout his career, Periton has developed an idiosyncratic visual language imbued with personal mythology and executed with acute precision. In various publicly commissioned artworks and sculptures (for example, Farringdon Station for the Crossrail Commission, at the New Art Centre, Roche Court; ROQ Oxford; and the Brentford Connection, all London), Periton has created outdoor pieces that make special reference to their settings while also showing the artist transmuting aesthetics of his earlier works in an ongoing exploration of naturally occurring forms and experimentations with materiality. ...
Simon Periton: Artworks
Sadie Coles HQ
London, London, LondonSadie Coles HQ is a London-based contemporary art gallery representing around fifty international artists. The gallery opened in 1997, with an inaugural exhibition of new paintings by American painter John Currin presented in parallel with an offsite show by British artist Sarah Lucas, The Law, at St John Street. This pairing established the international breadth of the gallery's programme, which has since expanded over the past two decades. Since its inception, Sadie Coles HQ has operated from a variety of spaces; most recently mounting offsite shows in Los Angeles and Mayfair in 2020 with a significant new video installation by Martine Syms. In September 2013, Sadie Coles HQ opened its largest space at 62 Kingly Street in Soho, as well as a second space at 1 Davies Street in Mayfair designed by 6a Architects in 2015, and a third space at 8 Bury Street in St James’s in April 2021. ...