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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Artwork framed.
Dimensions :
39.8x29.9in
About this artwork
This painting is part of a series that presents people as nameless characters—providing only snippets of their personal information in the titles—and entices the viewer into making assumptions and creating underlying narratives, all in an attempt to point out the unwittingly flawed nature of labelling. The assumptions and stories will vary significantly from viewer to viewer, and may say more about the observer than they do about the subject presented… in the paintings.
In this sense, the series could be summarized as being about human identity, perception and labelling. Furthermore, Tycho wanted to show these personas in moments of pensiveness, self-reflection and vulnerability. He wanted to show their humanity, with all its warts and blemishes.
« My goal is to create a compelling and dynamic image that resonates in the viewer, stated in as few brush strokes as necessary »
David Tycho is a prize-winning Canadian artist whose paintings have been widely exhibited on a national level, as well as in the United States, Switzerland, Belgium, and Singapore. His art is distinguished by the exploration of varying subjects and differing artistic approaches. Inspired to create from nature, urban expansion, and the people he encounters, Tycho translates these influences onto canvas in an improvisational, expressive, and abstract manner. He paints using acrylics with brushes, palette knives, trowels, sticks, and rollers.