Virginia Overton
Details
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.This contemporary artwork features a minimalist composition with a wooden beam resting on a rough stone slab. The work is characterized by a muted color palette of earthy tones, emphasizing the natural materials used. The clean lines and simple geometric forms create a sense of balance and visual harmony. The piece appears to explore the contrast between the industrial metal framework and the organic, weathered elements, inviting the viewer to contemplate the relationship between nature and human-made structures. This installation likely aims to challenge traditional notions of sculpture and encourage a deeper appreciation of the inherent beauty in everyday, overlooked objects. ...
Similar Artworks
Virginia Overton
1971 , AmericanVirginia Overton creates works that directly respond to the space they occupy through sculpture, installation, and photography. Continuously reusing and recycling materials used in her previous works, such as wood, brass, steel, glass or cedar from the artist’s family farm in Tennessee, Overton’s process is performative and reactive. She closely works with the settings of her works, be that architectural elements of a space or a natural landscape. Overton’s practice is in a refreshing and elegant dialogue with the traditionally monumental movement of land art. Combining industrial with natural elements, reinventing sculptures into paintings, and revealing inherent imperfections, Overton works with forms, textures and shapes, developing her unique sculptural language. ...
Virginia Overton: Artworks
Galerie Francesca Pia
ZürichGalerie Francesca Pia was founded 1990 in Bern and from their first exhibitions forward has consistently fostered contemporary artists including Betty Woodman (1990), Peter Fischli & David Weiss (1992), Hans-Peter Feldmann (1993), Thomas Bayrle (1998), Mai-Thu Perret (2000), Wade Guyton (2004), Jutta Koether (2008) and Rochelle Feinstein (2016) et al. Today the gallery is known for the discovery and promotion of emerging artists. After 16 years in Bern, the gallery moved to a larger space in Zurich in 2007. In 2012 the gallery extended and relocated to a more generous space in the historic Löwenbrau building, where it continues to engage in an ambitious program, representing over thirty artists of different generations. ...