Video: Collages by Ann Marshall
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
Ann Marshall's work combines realistic painting and patterned, often textural elements. Bright colors, perfectly matched materials and extraordinary faces, so carefully drawn by the artist's hand: all this gives collages Ann Marshall its unique charm.
Born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia, Ann Marshall attended the School of Visual Arts in New York. Now the already held artist has many exhibitions, but most often she is exhibited in New York, which during her studies became her family, in the city gallery.
The artist says: “Due to the fact that the artist needs to post his works on the Internet, a certain confusion occurs in the mind of the modern viewer regarding the scale and technique of performing the works of this or that author. In this regard, I would like to emphasize that all my collages are made by hand, without the use of retouching or Photoshop. Usually all I need to create them is canvas, oil paints, pieces of fabric, scissors and non-toxic glue."
And although the works of Ann Marshall are somewhat reminiscent of the canvases of the famous Austrian artist Gustav Klimt, they pursue a completely different goal: according to Anna herself, her collages should first of all reveal the individuality of the person depicted. Pieces of pasted material make the image bright and voluminous. The outer world on these canvases seems to complement the inner world and they merge in a small universe limited by the size of the canvas.
Many artists and photographers talked about the metamorphoses around us. Rick Stevens, for example, created paintings of natural metamorphosis. And Josh Sommers wanted to reveal the essence of human metamorphosis using Photoshop. Anna Marshal admits that the relationship between a person and a city, a person and a style, a person and certain norms is important for her. It is these metamorphoses, when a person has to do something, when something becomes a part of him, she considers the most important. And the artist would like to show that the city can not only suppress, but also organically fit into the human essence, not only without breaking the personality, but also opening up new and new facets in it.
For more information on the work of Ann Marshall, please visit her website www.annmarshallart.com. More collages of the artist can be seen on her personal Facebook page.
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