Known primarily as a painter of large-scale enigmatic oil on canvas works, T. Smith makes a marked departure in scale and media with "Sentient Meat," while still maintaining the guiding principle of Smith’s exploration of “Patternism.” All works in this show are new, recently completed in 2018. Each piece is hand drawn using a combination of conventional graphite pencils and Pentel Graph Gear mechanical pencils on acid-free Strathmore paper or Bristol vellum board. Each image is a detailed view into a slab of meat from both a macro and a micro perspective. The same type of patterns seen in raw "meat" are represented in the human body.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until January 31.
Known primarily as a painter of large-scale enigmatic oil on canvas works, T. Smith makes a marked departure in scale and media with "Sentient Meat," while still maintaining the guiding principle of Smith’s exploration of “Patternism.” All works in this show are new, recently completed in 2018. Each piece is hand drawn using a combination of conventional graphite pencils and Pentel Graph Gear mechanical pencils on acid-free Strathmore paper or Bristol vellum board. Each image is a detailed view into a slab of meat from both a macro and a micro perspective. The same type of patterns seen in raw "meat" are represented in the human body.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until January 31.
Known primarily as a painter of large-scale enigmatic oil on canvas works, T. Smith makes a marked departure in scale and media with "Sentient Meat," while still maintaining the guiding principle of Smith’s exploration of “Patternism.” All works in this show are new, recently completed in 2018. Each piece is hand drawn using a combination of conventional graphite pencils and Pentel Graph Gear mechanical pencils on acid-free Strathmore paper or Bristol vellum board. Each image is a detailed view into a slab of meat from both a macro and a micro perspective. The same type of patterns seen in raw "meat" are represented in the human body.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until January 31.