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HOTTEST

  • “In the Loving Care of Animal Spirits” (2022), oil and acrylic on linen, 200 x 300 centimeters. All images © Connor Addison, shared with permission

    Cubist Figures Wade into the Shadowy Depths of Connor Addison’s Allegories

    September 6, 2024

    Art

    Grace Ebert

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    With light inevitably comes darkness, a dualism Barcelona-based artist Connor Addison (previously) finds endlessly intriguing. “We so often forget to embrace the shadow as it’s presumed unloveable or is invisible,” he says.

    Addison pulls at what he finds “in the space between our joy, passion, conscious thought and our fear…what lies in the shadows of our mind.” He often begins a painting with an inquiry or thought that turns into an allegory. “Brothers II,” for example, came from the following questions: “What is a sibling relationship? How do play and manipulation function between siblings?”

    “Brothers II” (2024), 260 x 161 centimeters

    “Visualisation can be so spontaneous,” he adds. “The whole painting just emerges while brushing my teeth for example.”

    Working in muted palettes of earth tones, Addison renders cubist figures with pointed flesh and geometric limbs. Stripping away clothing and distinctive facial features appeals to universal feelings and emotions, like unconditional love, anguish, and curiosity. He adds:

    I like the idea that someone 2,000 years in the future or past would still find a work meaningful and intelligible, perhaps even on an alien planet! Allegory is a powerful thing. Its popularity died as religion fell out of vogue, and we became more literate, but I love a story captured in image. It can say so much more than the word.

    Addison is preparing for his next solo show with Aktion Art in 2026. Follow his work on Instagram.

    “How Long Must This Silence Echo” (2021), oil on linen, 140 x 89 centimeters

    “Mother, Mother” (2021), oil on linen, 150 x 150 centimeters

    “The Conversation” (2023), oil on Linen, 260 x 183 centimeters

    “Becoming Myself Without Any End” (2024), 263 x 142 centimeters

    “Something From Nothing” (2023), oil and watercolor on linen, 400 x 200 centimeters

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  • 
    Art

    #Daniel Dewar
    #Grégory Gicquel
    #quilts
    #sculpture
    #textiles
    #wood

    May 6, 2024

    Kate Mothes More

  • 
    Art
    Photography

    #animals
    #architecture
    #collage
    #humor
    #surreal

    March 19, 2021
    Grace Ebert

    “Cleo” (2020), 8.2 x 11.6 inches. All images © Lola Dupré, shared with permission
    Glasgow-based artist Lola Dupré (previously) continues her practice of slicing and rearranging photographs and art historical works into cleverly surreal collages. Her newest manipulations include a blockheaded Léon Bonnat, an entire row of irresistible puppy eyes, and a twisted rendition of George Stubbs’s “The Kongouro from New Holland.” Dupré’s cat, Charlie, still finds himself as fodder for the unusual works—see two pieces centered on him below—and the artist is currently in the process of creating her 33rd portrait of the orange-and-white feline. Find more of the Dupré’s compositions in the latest issue of Standart Magazine, shop originals and prints on her site, and see the distorted works in person at Portland’s Brassworks Gallery later this year. You also can follow along with the contorted creations on Instagram and Behance.

    “Kayack” (2020), 11.6 x 8.2 inches
    “Roo after Stubbs” (2021), 8.2 x 11.6 inches
    Left: “After Leon Bonnat” (2021), 8.2 x 11.6 inches. Right: “The Community” (2020), 8.2 x 11.6 inches
    “Charlie 32” (2021), 8.2 x 11.6 inches
    “Hardy” (2020), 16.5 x 11.5 inches
    Left: “Cat after Nathaniel Currier” (2021), 8.2 x 11.6 inches. Right: “Rand” (2021), 11.5 x 16.5 inches
    “Charlie 31” (2021), 11.6 x 8.2 inches

    #animals
    #architecture
    #collage
    #humor
    #surreal

    Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member and support independent arts publishing. Join a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, help support our interview series, gain access to partner discounts, and much more. Join now!

     
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  • 
    Art

    #art history
    #clay
    #sculpture
    #steampunk
    #Tomàs Barceló

    November 14, 2022

    Grace Ebert More

  • 
    Art

    #gouache
    #hair
    #painting

    March 23, 2021
    Grace Ebert

    All images © Mai Ta, shared with permission
    Saigon-based artist Mai Ta veils the subjects of her nuanced paintings with leaves, long locks of hair, splayed hands, and dim lighting. Utilizing muted tones and saturation, she works primarily in gouache to render lone women in domestic settings, creating introspective scenes that question what’s visible.  “Obscurity in my work represents my own inability to be confident about who I am,” the artist tells Colossal. “It’s easier to hide behind my hair (shadows, plants, anything) than to honestly express how I really feel.”
    Many of the pieces stem from Ta’s background, although she strives to connect her experiences and the viewers’. I Set the Moon on Fire Because She Wouldn’t Wake Up, a series comprised of many of the paintings shown here, was transformative in helping her realize that “exploring my own personal narrative and emotions can be both therapeutic and visually exciting,” she says. “I made work about how my friends’ and (my) rooftop moon-watching sessions moved me. I made work about my own heartbreak. I made work about missing and loving Vietnam.”
    Explore a larger collection of Ta’s paintings that examine the relationship between interior emotions and outward expressions on her site and Instagram. (via Juxtapoz)

    #gouache
    #hair
    #painting

    Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member and support independent arts publishing. Join a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, help support our interview series, gain access to partner discounts, and much more. Join now!

     
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Photography

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STREET ART

  • in Street Art

    David de la Mano’s ‘Sea Skin’ Connects Women, the Sea, and Time in Salerno

    11 November 2025, 07:37

  • in Street Art

    Roberto Carlos Treviño Rodriguez Explores the Fragility and Strength of the Mind with “Al Borde”

    14 October 2025, 11:53

  • in Street Art

    JOTALO Unveils a Poetic Tribute to Growth and Fragility in Villa del Río

    14 October 2025, 09:55

  • in Street Art

    Illuminating the Ordinary: David Speed’s Neon Goose Installation

    9 October 2025, 08:47

  • in Street Art

    Ettore and Andromaca Bring Ancient Myth to the Streets of Comacchio

    9 October 2025, 07:56

  • in Street Art

    Maurizio Cattelan and Avant Arte launch a global scavenger hunt with We Are the Revolution

    29 September 2025, 09:47

  • in Street Art

    MATRIZ — SpY orders the void with a suspended geometry in an old Hungarian power plant

    29 September 2025, 06:37

  • in Street Art

    British Courts Service Destroys Banksy Mural Depicting Attack by Judge

    10 September 2025, 15:40

  • in Street Art

    “S H A R E” by Giulio Vesprini in Italy

    18 June 2025, 12:10

ART

  • in Art

    70+ Artists Transform Matchboxes for Joy Machine’s ‘General Strike’

    13 November 2025, 14:58

  • in Art

    Glass Flora and Fauna Flutter in the Delicate Work of Kate Clements

    13 November 2025, 10:08

  • in Art

    Against the Pyramids of Giza, Vhils’ Etched Portraits Are Monuments of the Everyday

    12 November 2025, 17:57

  • in Art

    Michael Velliquette’s Metallic Paper Sculptures Delve into the Nature of Consciousness

    12 November 2025, 10:00

  • in Art

    Gilberto Rivera’s ‘Jailbirds’ Imagine Freedom Within Confinement

    10 November 2025, 19:07

  • in Art

    In ‘Inward,’ Cinta Vidal Folds Time and Space in Perspective-Bending Paintings

    10 November 2025, 15:10

  • in Art

    Kara Walker’s ‘Unmanned Drone’ Reimagines a Confederate Statue of Stonewall Jackson

    10 November 2025, 13:25

  • in Art

    The Colossal Shop’s 2025 Gift Guide: Gift Like an Artist

    6 November 2025, 19:09

  • in Art

    A Retrospective of Trailblazing Artist Faith Ringgold Centers Narratives of Black Americans

    6 November 2025, 16:12

Architecture

  • Winner of 2025 Tapestry Design Prize announced

  • Australian projects take out awards in the 2025 World Architecture Festival

  • AA Prize for Unbuilt Work 2026 shortlist revealed

  • Eagerly anticipated Sydney Fish Market complete

  • Winners of the Victorian Premier’s Design Awards announced

  • La Trobe unveils 30-year masterplan to evolve north Melbourne campus

  • Open House Melbourne 2026 welcomes expressions of interest

Exhibition

  • Why Have Cats Meant So Much, for So Long? A New Show Digs Into Their Symbolic Power

  • A Spark of Inspiration? How 45 Artists Have Reimagined the Humble Ashtray

  • Wes Anderson Brings Joseph Cornell’s Eccentric Workshop to Life in Paris

  • Monet, Degas, and Cézanne Star in Landmark Exhibition of Germany’s Finest Art Trove

  • Queen Elizabeth II’s Wardrobe Gets Its Largest Outing Yet

  • Artist Cj Hendry Is Unleashing Her First Collectible Toy

  • 8 Must-See Exhibitions in Tokyo Right Now

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