• Portfolio
  • About
  • Collections
  • Artists
  • Log In
Artwork Archive Logo
  • Discovery

Dave Nesbitt- Artwork Haven 2011

New York

Message
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Collections
  • Artists
Sunrise by Gwen Toomalatai
  • Gwen Toomalatai
  • Sunrise, 2003
  • Print
  • 39 x 30 in (99.06 x 76.2 cm)
  • Signature: AP Numbered and hand-signed by Toomalatai
  • $675
  • Available
  • Inquire
  • Purchase
  • Share
  • Facebook logo facebook Share this blog post via Facebook
  • Twitter logo twitter Share this blog post via Twitter
  • LinkedIn logo linkedin Share blog post via LinkedIn
  • Email logo email Share this blog post via email
Prev
Next

"Sunrise" is a Sold Out Artist's Proof Limited Edition mixed media masterpiece of white murano sheeting on ebony planche. AP Numbered 24 of 60 and hand-signed by Toomalatai! Includes Certificate of Authenticity! Measures Approx: 30" x 39" (no border).

In her thesis for a master of fine arts in painting, Gwen Peine Toomalatai (Toe-o-ma-lá-tie) expressed what her art means to her: "My paintings are mainly a reflection of my own journey in life and the lessons I've experienced up to this point. The animals, architecture, and nature that are represented in the paintings are intricately connected to my personal search for meaning and the discovery of the sacred both within and without."

The Inner Light and a Particular Methodology

The luminous quality of Toomalatai's paintings is accomplished by a series of meticulous steps. She uses birch plywood, rather than canvas as her base because the rigidity of the boards suits her technique of adding and removing layers of paint. Initially, each board is covered with an oil base that is applied by knife. This provides the texture to Toomalatai's work. The shine derives from her use of layers of paint and a glaze medium that she developed herself. The purity to the hues in Toomalatai's images is the result of the artist not mixing colors together. She applies a layer of paint mixed with glaze to the wood, and then wipes back or sands down that layer, before applying the next layer of paint and glaze.

Keeping the colors pure means that each layer remains rich and clear. Light travels through each layer, hits the white base, and then reflects and refracts back through the image to the viewer. The evolution of this technique was spurred by Toomalatai's study and appreciation of 17th century northern European painters, most notably Rembrandt and Jan van Eyck. Rembrandt's manipulation of light and shadow, and the glowing quality to van Eyck's paintings, prompted Toomalatai to explore pure pigments and different surfaces to paint on. After considerable experimentation, she arrived at the methods she employs in her art to this day.

  • Subject Matter: Landscape
  • Collections: Photographic Image

Other Work From Dave Nesbitt- Artwork Haven 2011

Friends to Robin by Karen Tarlton
Starry Winter Landscape by Karen Tarlton
Mountain Summer Lake Sailing by Karen Tarlton
Moonlight Sailing by Karen Tarlton
Wealth by Jiang Tiefeng
Death of Christ by Todonov ?
Entree De Cha-U-Kao by Henry de Toulouse-Lautrec
Hastings Beach, UK  1872 by John Thorpe
Tall Lousewort  1843 Litho by John Torrey
Rich Weed 1843 Litho. by John Torrey
See all artwork from Dave Nesbitt- Artwork Haven 2011
 

Powered by Artwork Archive