|
Featured Artists |
| |
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
Copyright © 2008
The Redstone Gallery
All Rights Reserved |
|
|
| |
| |
|
Emanuel Mattini |
| |
|
“When I paint I
am a song. I am part of a rhythmic flow thrown into
the river of time.”
Born in
Shiraz Iran, Emanuel Mattini emigrated to the United
States in 1983. His artistic gifts matured through
extensive travel and formal training in painting and
photography. The result is an imagery of many
textures and cultures, embracing past traditions and
present concerns in both the western and eastern
worlds. Just as the Polish-born author Joseph Conrad
became an eloquent and unique voice in English
literature, Emanuel’s art has begun to mark the
evolution of Western art. Combining a profound
knowledge of history with a sensitive awareness of
his current cultural surroundings, Emanuel’s art
presents an original expression of our time.
Built primarily on the art of collage, Emanuel’s art
is woven from a fabric of tradition. Much more than
a theoretical exercise or a decorative statement,
his approach to collage embodies the masters, such
as Rauschenberg, Braque and Carra, but also
transcends their modernist stance, moving toward a
more sensuous and sincere artistic space. In this,
his vision encompasses the twentieth century
experience while also intuiting the aesthetic
outlook of the new millennium.
Seeking new psychological and philosophical
perspectives, Emanuel paints almost exclusively en
serie
–
allowing infinite variations to unfold and multiply
from a single, rational framework. This style
approaches the postmodern, de-centered attitudes of
late-twentieth century art, and this diversity
mirrors our own multicultural society. Moreover, as
his work is saturated with the theme of music, each
canvas is injected with sound and opened up to
additional senses and interpretations.
Emanuel’s sense of space and color are also unique
in their balanced disorder. Especially in the
large-scale abstractions, color strikes an
immediate, emotional chord, delivering sensations
that are at once emphatic and romantic, concrete and
metaphysical, post-modern and baroque. In these
paintings, platonic ideals mingle with tangible
objects to create scenes that could be straight from
Donne’s poetry—always
transferring energy from the physical world into a
more spiritual realm. |
|
|
|
Sonata |
Stanza |
|
|
|
Prelude |
Opus |
|
|
|
Harmony |
Forte |
|
|
|
Ensemble |
Allegro |
|
|
|
Adagio |
a-flat |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
adagio |
allegro |
compilation |
Composition |
|
|
|
|
|
d-flat |
ensemble |
forte |
opus |
|
|
|
|
prelude |
Framed Hallycon Canvas |
|
|
|
| |
| |
|