Discover the creation in interiors
Artwork details
- Medium : Spray Paint, Objects on Canvas , Wood
- Framing : Framing on request
- Dimensions : 19.7x31.1in
About this artwork
This is a play between earthy and heavenly realities, a tension between what is and what should be and how we navigate those planes.
Part of the ongoing series "the theory of being".
Part of the ongoing series "the theory of being".
Robbie MacKintosh
United Kingdom
Credentials
- Local Artist
- Works on commission
Robbie Mackintosh is a contemporary artist whose work explores what it means to exist fully as a human being without detaching from reality.
Working through layered surfaces that combine text, abstraction, and raw material gestures, his paintings sit in the tension between inner belief and external life. They reflect the challenge of holding onto meaning, presence, and faith within the noise and pressure of the modern world.
His ongoing series, The Theory of Being, develops this exploration—focusing on how we remain present and engaged rather than withdrawing or numbing out. Each work acts as both a statement and a question, inviting the viewer to consider their own experience of being.
Mackintosh’s practice is rooted in a direct and honest engagement with reality, avoiding idealisation in favour of something immediate and lived. His work does not aim to escape the world, but to confront and inhabit it fully.
Working through layered surfaces that combine text, abstraction, and raw material gestures, his paintings sit in the tension between inner belief and external life. They reflect the challenge of holding onto meaning, presence, and faith within the noise and pressure of the modern world.
His ongoing series, The Theory of Being, develops this exploration—focusing on how we remain present and engaged rather than withdrawing or numbing out. Each work acts as both a statement and a question, inviting the viewer to consider their own experience of being.
Mackintosh’s practice is rooted in a direct and honest engagement with reality, avoiding idealisation in favour of something immediate and lived. His work does not aim to escape the world, but to confront and inhabit it fully.