SAATCHI GALLERY
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SELECTED WORKS BY Andy Collins



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Andy Collins

Untitled

2001
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

127 x 134.5cm

Andy Collins’s paintings are lusciously synthetic. Cold and glossy, his large pastel canvases are suffocating vacuums of glamour. Working from fashion photos, Collins’s abstracted forms are derived from the overlooked in-between spaces of supermodel spreads. Folds in fabric, creases in elbows, knees and armpits become a pattern of fetishised contemplation. Their contours are retraced and suggested forms are embellished, creating ethereal motifs that are both organic and electrifying. Collins’s process is one of almost perverse fixation. Taking several months to complete a painting, he painstakingly constructs his airless forms entirely by hand, leaving no trace of brushwork. In Untitled, his biomorphic composition, a sublime vacuous beauty, mesmerises both seduction and emptiness.


Andy Collins

Untitled

2002
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

175 x 165cm

Andy Collins’s paintings glow with a transcendental eroticism, bringing about a heightened state of awareness where physical sensuality courts cerebral enlightenment. Inspired by the prurience of fashion adverts, Untitled’s composition construes desire’s lingering remains as a Rorschach-like distortion; a mandala of allurement and absence. Collins conceives overwhelming sensation as an intangible void; his paintings resonate with a voyeuristic proclivity. Equally intimate and distant, his obsessive process (of up to 30 layers of seamless application) infuses his smooth surface with a slick confidence.


Andy Collins

Untitled

2003
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

122 x 129.5cm

Andy Collins’s paintings manufacture a hermetically sealed aesthetic, offering a deceptive brand of pop. In Untitled, benign-toned colour fields sit with antiseptic perfection, their plastic forms fade in and out of soft-porn focus, pulsating from the contoured motif. In hand-rendering the trappings of superficial attraction, Collins serves up clinical beauty with a fine strategic awareness. Fluctuating between the mechanical and biological, Collins evokes an unsettling hybrid: a calculating and corporate detachment born of the most intimate sentiment.


Andy Collins

Untitled

2001
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

141 x 145cm

Andy Collins's paintings are models of visual perfection. Approaching painting with a minimalist's fetishism, Collins hones his canvases to the simplest and boldest statements to capitalise on the power of suggested form. Working from photos, Andy Collins removes the subject, focussing instead on the evocative possibility of implied image. His abstracted patterns retain the essence of their original picture, and extrapolate a more complex interpretation, provoking emotional and spiritual reactions to qualities of surface, colour and composition. In Untitled, Andy Collins presents a pattern of mesmerising consonance. His biomorphic form insinuates bodily tactility; through clinical rendering, Andy Collins elevates these connotations to a metaphysical plane, creating a sensuality that's idealistic and conceptually pure.


Andy Collins

Untitled

2005
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

150 x 137cm

Combining both the spiritualism of abstract painting with the sublime numbness of mass media reproduction, Andy Collins infuses Untitled with a divine aura. Reminiscent of religious painting, Collins’s blues and golds evaporate into halos of blinding white radiance. Space becomes the focus of Collins’s painting. Suggestive of a topographical map, his forms waver with entropic energy, condensing and expanding in their abstracted plane.


Andy Collins

Untitled

2005
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

137 x 129cm

Andy Collins’s abstract paintings flirt between the intellect of formalist perfection and the frivolity of high-gloss design. In Untitled, Collins’s jagged pattern tears through his canvas with cartoon violence, suggestive of teeth, geological landscapes or seismological graphs. Effusing his form with a toxic glow, Collins subtly shifts the concentrated flatness of his image to a dynamic element of intrigue. His seamless brushwork renders this painting flawless. This controlled craftsmanship adds depth to the generic aesthetic of mass production.


Andy Collins

Untitled

2005
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

105.4 x 141cm

Reducing recognisable forms to their barest essentials, Andy Collins’s Untitled is neither abstract nor figurative; but rather hosts a supernatural quality of inbetween-ness, an embodiment of aura and retention. Collins uses this subliminality as a departure point for mystical experience. Fixating on the suggested contours of forms, he slips between these cracks, physically exploring the workings of his image from inside-out; caressing its creases, savouring the possibilities of their imagined space. Through his intensive process of painting, Collins addresses the links between physicality and memory, the frailties of perception lifts into an expansive field of wonder and entrancement.


Andy Collins

Untitled

2001
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

173 x 168cm

Andy Collins develops his forms from the sensuous suggestion of magazine layouts: tracing the gaps created by necklines, folded knees and flirtatious ripples in fabric. His paintings reproduce the sexual frisson of glimpsing up a skirt, the electric fixation of imagining what lies beneath. Through his intensive painting process, Collins's titillating forms melt into mesmerising abstractions. Contemplation of negative space takes metaphysical form, a knowledge gained not only from seeing, but experiencing silky textures and promising depths. Through the physicality of making, Collins’s figurative subjects are expressed in abstract fields, as synthetic and emotionally distant as his sources.


Andy Collins

Untitled

2005
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

183 x 162.5CM


Andy Collins

Untitled

2005
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

152 x 147cm


Andy Collins

Untitled

2002
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

157.5 x 173


Andy Collins

Untitled

2002
Oil and Alkyd on Canvas

180 x 175cm



ARTIST INFORMATION




ARTICLES



ANDY COLLINS
about the artist|

Articles about Andy Collins

Andy Collins at Massimo Audiello
By Bill Arning, Art in America, Oct 1999
For his first solo show, emerging painter Andy Collins (who was still in school when he was spotted by art dealer Audiello) shows considerable facility, even charm, but also a certain lack of gravity often associated with less seasoned artists. The seven paintings on view, all untitled and from 1998, could be described as a type of biomorphic abstraction. But, like many younger painters, Collins seems to try to slip between conventional descriptive categories. All seven are dominated by expanses of flat, smooth and shiny monochrome grounds. The palettes are a fashionable selection of sherbet pinks and yellows, as well as institutional powder greens and blues. Four are perfect squares and the remaining three slightly off-square; the format, combined with the centered, symmetrical compositions, gives each a certain iconic weight. The painterly events were inspired by subtle passages discovered in fashion photographs, which Collins translated through a series of graphite drawings. The resulting works evoke their sources without depicting them. Read the entire article (Source: www.findarticles.com)

ANDY COLLINS - PAINTINGS
Andy Collins was born 1971 in Atlanta, Georgia. The artist now lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

Walking a thin line between figuration and abstraction, Collins has struck upon a new breed of forms. Raw and elegant each shape has the mirrored symmetry of a Rorschach test which allows them to play with our psyche. Forms with a mantra like quality, one can almost hear them generate sound vibrations through the thick pools of alkyd. Almost like melted ice-cream, the surface seduces us into a meditative space where our minds are able to wander through the subliminal territory of each reflected shape.

By dissecting images from the glossy pages of fashion magazines, Collins developed this new world of visceral forms in suspended animation. Although potentially banal as sources, he reduces the over-saturated imagery of mass-media to its minutia until he has discovered an austere majesty.
Read the entire article Source: (www.artfacts.net)
 
 

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