Yesterday, I found myself in the Musées d’Art et d’Histoire in Geneva. There’s currently an exhibition of Roger Pfund’s work. It is quite simply stunning! It shows how Pfund has mastered different media but painting is, as he says, the “vertebral column” of all his work. The bank notes that he has designed for many countries are fascinating. But center stage has to be his eight-piece pictorial depiction of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This is a must see exhibition. Watch this video clip:
Category Archives: Paintings
Peter Hobden has done it again!
Last week, we featured Peter Hobden’s cityscapes. At present, he lives in Manila and has sent us two of his latest: both 60cm x 50cm oil on canvas. He’s done it again: gorgeous colours and big city atmosphere!
Alison Hale’s horses
Alison Hale grew up and still lives on the rugged west coast of New Zealand’s South Island. She has painted every facet of country life there and has won high acclaim for doing so. New Zealanders collect her work avidly seeking a glimpse of a bygone era.
Alison’s formative years were spent riding, rounding up, caring for and dreaming about working horses; no surprise then that horses feature prominently in her painting.
Her horses live. They are anatomically and ergonomically correct. Her oil is liberally thinned and in places runs down the canvas reminding the viewer of the never-ending west coast rain.
Alison is based in the unlikely mining town of Reefton. Since I met her there in 2006 working in her studio, her theme has moved steadily away from a wet and gritty country reality towards the equine dream-world of her younger days. Now, elegant fantasy horses in fantasy settings step forward onto her canvases. These are beautiful, technically accomplished and captivating paintings. They too will be eagerly collected by her compatriots.