Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Yasmine Weiss’s Strange, Intimate Portraits

Yasmine Weiss describes her works as “pretty realistic but not quite.” These oil paintings and drawings carry a surreal quality, with touches of the intimate and the disconcerting. Weiss says she has always had a fascination with humanity, and as being hard-pressed to explain why is part of the engine that fuels her work.


Yasmine Weiss describes her works as “pretty realistic but not quite.” These oil paintings and drawings carry a surreal quality, with touches of the intimate and the disconcerting. Weiss says she has always had a fascination with humanity, and as being hard-pressed to explain why is part of the engine that fuels her work.



The artist lives and works in Brussels, Belgium. She recently designed the album cover for Diapsiquir’s “180°.”

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Denis Sarazhin, a Ukraine-born artist, crafts textured oil paintings that convey both mystery and motion. His “Pantomime” series, in particular, focuses on gestures and a dramatic sense of motion through multiple limbs and hands. His work has been compared to masters like Egon Schiele, though through the kinetic nature and specific use of color in his work, Sarazhin has forged an approach all his own.
With “Feast of Totems,” oil painter Emily Mae Smith examines and deconstructs motifs from art history, "claiming space for feminine subjectivity” and often featuring a multi-representational “Broom” character. The show kicks off on June 9 and runs through July 14 at the gallery Contemporary Fine Arts in Berlin.
Austin, Texas based artist Kate Zambrano sees beauty differently than most people. The subjects of her paintings and drawings are obviously blessed with natural good looks (many of her images are based on models like Codie Young), but Zambrano couples this ideal with attitude and darkness. A self taught artist, Zambrano exhibits a keen understanding of how atmosphere defines her subjects' persona, balancing their strength with their 'barely there' forms. Many of her pieces use light and shadow play with high contrast, usually monochromatic tones, to bring out their emotional diversity.
Italy-born painter Fulvio Di Piazza offers a new collection of oil works on canvas in the new exhibit “Entangled” at Jonathan Levine Gallery in January. The solo show kicks off on Jan. 7 and runs through Jan. 28. Di Piazza was featured in Hi-Fructose Vol. 25 and the exhibit "Turn the Page: The First Ten Years of Hi-Fructose," a collaboration between the magazine and Virginia MOCA.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List