
MARS 1 - "ROTATION"
Mars1 - Rotation
Edition Size: 50
19 x 19 Inches Archival Pigment Print on 330gsm Fine Art Paper
Custom framed with Museum Glass
"Rotation was this new development in my work that I’ve been experimenting with. It’s this sort of merging and melting between the environment and the objects. There’s less separation between the background, the foreground, the sky and all the physical objects and geometric shapes. Kind of a feeling of this biological, mechanical weather. It’s a strange fuzzing or blurring of the distinctions between the physical, the ethereal, the mental and the biological.
I’m really trying to play with the seen and unseen. It’s some of these realities that we encounter on earth on a regular basis but somehow it feels like an alternate environment, an alien environment. It’s abstract in the sense that it’s hard to put into words. That’s the point I guess, exploring the grey areas of fleeting ideas or concepts that visually communicate to a dimension or depth that words may not do justice in attempting to explain. This is the direction the work that I have been doing lately is going, there is less distinction behind these elements. It’s a bit of macro and micro, all these different polarities combining." - Mars1
Mars1 - Rotation
Edition Size: 50
19 x 19 Inches Archival Pigment Print on 330gsm Fine Art Paper
Custom framed with Museum Glass
"Rotation was this new development in my work that I’ve been experimenting with. It’s this sort of merging and melting between the environment and the objects. There’s less separation between the background, the foreground, the sky and all the physical objects and geometric shapes. Kind of a feeling of this biological, mechanical weather. It’s a strange fuzzing or blurring of the distinctions between the physical, the ethereal, the mental and the biological.
I’m really trying to play with the seen and unseen. It’s some of these realities that we encounter on earth on a regular basis but somehow it feels like an alternate environment, an alien environment. It’s abstract in the sense that it’s hard to put into words. That’s the point I guess, exploring the grey areas of fleeting ideas or concepts that visually communicate to a dimension or depth that words may not do justice in attempting to explain. This is the direction the work that I have been doing lately is going, there is less distinction behind these elements. It’s a bit of macro and micro, all these different polarities combining." - Mars1