Hector Marino
The French Perspective: Contemporary Art from France
June 27 - July 17, 2009
Reception:
Thursday July 2, 2009 6-8 PM
Press Release
Hector Marino's oils are eminently physical works. Thick impasto and deep, tangible color literally extend outside of the usual two-dimensionality of painting. Brush and knife are called into service both to slather the canvas with paint and to peel it back, often swath by swath. This results in backgrounds so fully realized that their visual interest is often equal to that of the main subject itself. He can expertly capture broad expanses of water and sky with almost impossibly rich smoothness offset by careful textural variations that mimic the never-uniform dynamics of the physical world. Marino also clearly knows how to call upon the "less is more" philosophy when needed, as often he breaks up fields of color by the smallest patches of dramatically complemental hues.
Marino has a touch and discipline that belie the fact that he has been painting for less than a decade. It is not surprising, then, that already he has exhibited in his native France, in Canada and in New York.
Artist Statement
For a long time I had no thoughts of becoming an artist, or moving at all in the artistic world. I was a successful practitioner and teacher of Judo - in fact, I competed internationally. But in 2000 when I came across a Nicolas de Staël painting, and from then everything changed. I had been inspired, and I felt a hidden passion beginning to show itself. At first I was also influenced by Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock or Pierre Soulages, but over time I have grown as an artist and I now have a unique style that is all my own. I try to remain internationally relevant - I exhibit in France, Canada and America. I paint mainly with oil and knives, on canvas or wooden, often big sized panels.
Invitation to the exhibition
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Artists in this exhibition
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