Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Nicholas Bohac’s Immersive, Celestial Paintings

San Francisco-based visual artist Nicholas Bohac contemplates "the big picture" in his immersive, mixed media works that feature celestial figures amidst dreamlike landscapes. In his artist statement, Bohac writes that his purpose is "to question the universe and where, exactly, people fit into it… Through my work, I aim to explore the overall phenomenon of what it means to be human, past, present and future."


San Francisco-based visual artist Nicholas Bohac contemplates “the big picture” in his immersive, mixed media works that feature celestial figures amidst dreamlike landscapes. In his artist statement, Bohac writes that his purpose is “to question the universe and where, exactly, people fit into it… Through my work, I aim to explore the overall phenomenon of what it means to be human, past, present and future.”




Working in the techniques of painting, collage and printmaking, Bohac utilizes a combination of materials, from acrylics and spray paints to gold leaf and holographic film. While Bohac’s paintings clearly draw from the natural world, they also tend to blur the boundaries between nature and technology. One example is the piece “Glitch Iceberg”, in which the subject is positioned against an abstract background resembling computer screen glitches. Other works feature starry skies interjected with geometric shapes and psychedelic colors and suggest a world that is both familiar and surreal.




With a sense of wonder and curiosity, Bohac contemplates how our interactions with our surroundings help to define who we are. He portrays figures roaming through and exploring vast landscapes, capturing moments with camera phones or simply gazing out at the scenery in quiet introspection. Newer works also ponder how human impact has altered our planet and affected our relationship to the environment.



Nicholas Bohac was born and raised in Ralston, a suburb of Omaha, Nebraska. He studied at Bellevue University and earned his MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute. His work has appeared in New American Paintings and at gallery exhibitions in Portland (Oregon), Los Angeles, and San Francisco. More of his art can be found on his Instagram.


Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
In his depictions of the everyday, Arcmanoro Niles recalls traditional figurative painting while subverting in his choice of hues and glitter—and also introducing strange characters into the scenes dubbed "seekers." These characters offer new insight and disruption to the people he pulls from his own life.
In Filipino artist Ronson Culibrina’s haunting yet vibrant paintings, the artist examines globalization, social issues, and more through both crowded and sparse scenes. The artist is also taking a look at art history inside his home country of the Philippines, as well injecting cross-cultural and Biblical iconography.
Eguchi Ayane is a Japanese artist whose oil paintings transport the viewer to candy-colored fantasy lands. Yet within these whimsical worlds, startling scenarios unfold. Juxtaposing 'cutesy' images of teddy bears, bow ties and charming creatures with the darker undercurrent of her narratives, the artist expresses the duality of not only her world, but ours as well. Find more of her work on Twitter.
Kip Omolade's "Diovadiova Chrome" portrait series brings out the striking qualities of the human face. The artist takes inspiration from African folk art forms such as the ivory masks of Benin and the Ife bronze heads of Nigeria. He considers his work a contemporary exploration of the mask as a conduit between mankind and the spirit world. For his updated take on this timeworn subject matter, Omilade makes plaster casts of models' faces and uses them to create resin sculptures, which he coats with chrome and embellishes with fake eyelashes. The masks serve as reference material for Omolade's hyperrealist oil paintings, which pay homage to African cultural traditions in a novel way.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List