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July 2010 | by: Claudia Massie | Comments (2)

A Cerebral Approach

Andrew Mackenzie is an intriguing artist. His cerebral approach and beautiful, controlled drawing take his landscape paintings well beyond a genre that is all too often enslaved to the palette knife and the extravagant colour spectrum. He said recently, ‘I now feel less clear about what “landscape” actually is, and about what we mean by “nature” and “manmade”, than I ever have.’ His unusual methodology sees him confront the landscape armed with a notebook as much a sketchbook and then construct his preparatory drawings on the actual painting surface, building the painting on top, so that the ‘finished’ painting retains the ghostly marks of the exploratory drawing.

In creating these complex, layered paintings, Mackenzie produces a distortion of perspective and spatial reality, conflating disparate elements of the environments, such as trees and car parks or motorway footbridges on show. He uses an understated palette, occasionally enlivened by a searing bright cadmium red or lemon yellow, applied strong and flat to further obfuscate the actuality of the landscape. The resultant paintings, despite being filled with the most accurate and meticulous drawing, are almost abstract in their overall design. They are reminiscent in some ways of some Japanese printmaking, containing a similar complicated flatness and well-ordered compositional balance. They are undeniably beautiful.

Andrew is currently exhibiting in London at Sarah Myerscough Fine Art. The show runs until the 31st July. A PDF brochure of his work for this exhibition can be viewed here.

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July 13th, 2010 9:06am

simon

Claudia-Great post again.. I just had a good rummage around on Andrew's site, and his paintings are intriguing, beautiful and affordable.. I went to a screening of Christopher Nolan's new film 'Inception' last night and some of the bending of perspective and the colours reminded me of the movie.

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July 14th, 2010 1:11pm

sarah Myerscough

Hi Claudia, This is an excellent appraisal of the work in this exhibition. It is rare to see such talent where the joy of making and attention to content is so carefully considered, it gives the gallery a very tranquil aura, where time stands still for a few brief moments! Many thanks! Sarah Myerscough

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