Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

The Art of Jeffrey Vincent

Featuring vivid scenes of gatherings of people and beasts,artist Jeffrey Vincent fills his work with a juxtaposition of color andmovement. Contrasting these joyous landscapes are strange additions that add anunsettling foreboding to the work. Featureless figures shrouded in blackconfront a group of people cocooned in vibrant robes while a tall beast crashesa party filled with bizarrely helmeted partygoers. Appearing as dreams gonesour with anxious apparitions, the work is successful in both it’s subjectmatter and composition as well as it’s execution. Paint is wildly applied and yetretains a measure of control while color is expertly balanced, adding to theintensity of the imagery. View more of the work after the jump.

Featuring vivid scenes of gatherings of people and beasts, artist Jeffrey Vincent fills his work with a juxtaposition of color and movement. Contrasting these joyous landscapes are strange additions that add an unsettling foreboding to the work. Featureless figures shrouded in black confront a group of people cocooned in vibrant robes while a tall beast crashes a party filled with bizarrely helmeted partygoers. Appearing as dreams gone sour with anxious apparitions, the work is successful in both it’s subject matter and composition as well as it’s execution. Paint is wildly applied and yet retains a measure of control while color is expertly balanced, adding to the intensity of the imagery. View more of the work below.

Meta
Topics
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
"I did not always know that I would be making this particular work,” says painter Vickie Vainionpää, “but that’s the beauty of being an artist. To follow your interests, pulling at threads and slowly but surely a path becomes clear.”Read the full article on the artist by clicking above!
A fine balance of light, dark, serious, and silly, the paintings of Rachel Hayden are the culmination of her life experiences, expressed through peculiar motifs, alluring symmetry, and disassociated figures. There is at once something inviting, yet withdrawn, about this work... Read the full article and interview with the artist by clicking above.
"Color for me is very much about that initial emotional impact; it is almost like a precursor to the mood of a painting,” says Koak. Read the full article on Koak by clicking above.
David Cerný is by all accounts the most famous artist in the Czech Republic. A quick Google search confirms that diagnosis by revealing the byproduct of artistic success: article upon article attempting to pigeonhole him. Read Clayton Schuster's full article on the artist by clicking above!

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List