Ro2 Art will present "Re-articulation," a solo exhibition featuring new works by artist Jeanne Neal.
Neal’s paintings are non-objective, gestural works that create a visual language suggesting objects, figures, or patterns derived from nature. A brushstroke serves as a vine, a tendril, or petals bursting out from the picture plane. In composition, balance, and hue the works approach the baroque. They are ornate and weighty without losing a sense of lightness, the complex images seem to float on the substrate. Repetition and evolution are central to her practice. Many of these works were made during quarantine. Neal’s pieces find balance between the heavy hues and the frozen quickness of her brushwork.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through June 17.
Ro2 Art will present "Re-articulation," a solo exhibition featuring new works by artist Jeanne Neal.
Neal’s paintings are non-objective, gestural works that create a visual language suggesting objects, figures, or patterns derived from nature. A brushstroke serves as a vine, a tendril, or petals bursting out from the picture plane. In composition, balance, and hue the works approach the baroque. They are ornate and weighty without losing a sense of lightness, the complex images seem to float on the substrate. Repetition and evolution are central to her practice. Many of these works were made during quarantine. Neal’s pieces find balance between the heavy hues and the frozen quickness of her brushwork.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through June 17.
Ro2 Art will present "Re-articulation," a solo exhibition featuring new works by artist Jeanne Neal.
Neal’s paintings are non-objective, gestural works that create a visual language suggesting objects, figures, or patterns derived from nature. A brushstroke serves as a vine, a tendril, or petals bursting out from the picture plane. In composition, balance, and hue the works approach the baroque. They are ornate and weighty without losing a sense of lightness, the complex images seem to float on the substrate. Repetition and evolution are central to her practice. Many of these works were made during quarantine. Neal’s pieces find balance between the heavy hues and the frozen quickness of her brushwork.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through June 17.