Visionary and Psychedelic Art – Surrealism Today https://surrealismtoday.com Contemporary surreal, visionary and pop surreal art Wed, 23 Jul 2025 14:44:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://media.surrealismtoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/12202037/cropped-surrealism-today-favicon-556e0c04v1_site_icon-256x256-32x32.png Visionary and Psychedelic Art – Surrealism Today https://surrealismtoday.com 32 32 218978170 Christian Quintin https://surrealismtoday.com/christian-quintin/ https://surrealismtoday.com/christian-quintin/#respond Wed, 23 Jul 2025 14:43:33 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=21775 In This Article:

About Christian Quintin

Christian Quintin doesn’t paint what he sees. He paints what you remember feeling—before you had words for it. His images arrive like déjà vu: a tree that’s also a dancer, a face made of rooms, a landscape that breathes.

Born in coastal Brittany and now working in Northern California, Quintin has developed a body of work that defies easy classification. It’s romantic, surreal, meticulously crafted, and deeply philosophical. He offers no slogans, no manifestos—only an invitation: “See the art as one would read poetry, hopeful that one would wander into its imagery.”

For more than four decades, he has followed this invitation himself, using ink, oil, graphite, and pastel to explore the twin landscapes of the psyche and the natural world. What emerges is not a split practice but a unified vision: a visual philosophy that connects inner consciousness and outer terrain in a seamless, symbolic language.

From Brittany to California: A Life Shaped by Landscape

Quintin’s art begins with a coastline. He was born in 1957 in Saint Brieuc, a port town on the moody northern coast of Brittany. There, amid ruined castles and storm-lashed cliffs, he developed an early sensitivity to nature’s grandeur and melancholy. One island in particular—L’Île de la Comtesse—became a mythic point of return in his later works. Its architecture, its solitude, its storybook aura still appear like recurring dreams.

In 1975, he moved inland to the ateliers of Paris, where he studied at the prestigious Beaux Arts Academy. Here, his romantic instincts were tempered by classical discipline. The precise draftsmanship, control of form, and mastery of materials that would define his later work were forged during this period. He absorbed the legacy of French Surrealism, but also the Symbolists and the Romantic painters. Not to shock, but to reveal.

Then came the turning point: in 1981, Quintin crossed the Atlantic and settled in Northern California. In the vineyards and valleys of Sonoma County, he found not only beauty but resonance. “I feel the same spirit in a tree as in myself,” he’s said. And so the California landscape became his second vocabulary—his trees, skies, and rivers not just depicted, but communed with. The old myths of Brittany had found their mirror in the sacred ecology of the American West.

Drawing the Invisible: His Surrealist Language of Mind and Mystery

Quintin’s surrealist works are not dreams in the Freudian sense, but interior constellations—maps of memory, emotion, and presence. Often rendered in pen and ink or oil, these compositions contain layered imagery, uncanny metaphors, and astonishing technical precision.

In his self-described “kaleidoscopic consciousness” paintings, boundaries dissolve. In The Aviary, Quintin’s face emerges from within a crystal, his neck becomes the trunk of a tree, and his hair unfurls as leafy canopy. It took him six months to complete—and the result is less a portrait than an ecosystem of self.

Works like La Porte Ouverte, inspired by a Rumi poem, are visual meditations. “Why stay in prison when the door is wide open?” asks the poet. Quintin replies not with words, but with seven months of crosshatched mystery—symbols and figures that blur the edges of logic and dream.

This is not automatism. These images are not accidents. They are built, slowly, with intent. “When you draw a tree, you also draw yourself,” he’s said. Each stroke is a negotiation between spirit and form, between idea and the hand.

The Romance of Nature: Landscapes that Breathe, Trees that Speak

Alongside his surrealist works, Quintin creates luminous landscapes—emotive sceneries in oil or pastel that seem to hum with life. These aren’t documentations of place. They are emotional terrains.

Trees in his paintings sway like dancers (Leaves of Absence) or embrace like lovers (Les Amants). A river doesn’t just reflect the sky—it carries memory, mood, and metaphor. In A Lake Color of Emeralds, he writes, “The sky is brown-orange with violet, the lake bright emerald, the sea olive green.” Color is feeling. Shape is story.

California’s hills and Brittany’s coastlines repeat as characters in his visual vocabulary. But even in his most “realistic” landscapes, there’s always a pulse of surrealism. In West Sonoma County, a floating face emerges from clouds, its lips becoming an island. In Putah Creek, An Eruption of Life, nature bursts into exuberance, as if consciousness itself were blooming from the soil.

This is not a dual practice. His landscape and surrealist modes are not opposing forces. They are mirrors. Each feeds the other. The symbolic enters the natural; the natural becomes symbolic. It’s all one vision, seen through two eyes.

One Philosophy, Two Visions: A Unified Inner/Outer World

Quintin’s philosophy is simple and radical: art should be beautiful, emotional, and intuitive. It should not tell you what to think—it should give you space to feel.

“I do not have a message,” he’s said. “But I feel compelled to convey the feelings that flow through me as I attempt to create something beautiful.”

In his writings, he advises artists to draw the first thing that comes to mind, without judgment. “Intuition first. Technique follows.” He matches each work with the medium it calls for—pastel, oil, graphite—like a musician choosing an instrument. Each line, each hue, is tuned.

This rejection of irony, of didacticism, sets him apart. In an art world often preoccupied with critique, Quintin returns us to wonder. He creates not to argue, but to remind.

A Slow-Burning Career That Caught Fire

For years, Christian Quintin worked steadily in Northern California, exhibiting at respected regional galleries and creating public commissions across the state—from hospital lobbies to city murals. His technical mastery and poetic voice earned him accolades: the Grumbacher Award in 1987, an Award of Excellence from the California State Fair in 1990.

But a key turning point came in 1999, when the Vorpal Gallery—which famously introduced M.C. Escher to American audiences—began showing his work. This association placed him in a lineage of artists who combine meticulous technique with mind-bending ideas.

In the 2020s, a new chapter began. With representation by Lorin Gallery, Quintin’s work entered the international stage: KIAF in Seoul, Art Central in Hong Kong, shows in Paris, Los Angeles, and soon, the Morrison Gallery in Connecticut.

He didn’t change his work to fit the art world. The art world caught up.

What the Critics See—and Why It Matters

Over the years, critics have returned to the same words: beauty, mystery, technical mastery. Alhia Warren called his work a “beautiful intimate mystery.” Suzanne Munich titled her review “Mental Landscapes.” Dan Taylor wrote in the Press Democrat: “Emerging Beauty.”

A 2022 Calabi Gallery review stood out: “In an era largely devoid of it, his work is beautiful. We could all use more beauty in our lives.” That wasn’t flattery—it was diagnosis. Quintin’s work fills a gap left by cynicism and irony.

Quintin’s Legacy in the Visionary Continuum

Christian Quintin belongs to the surrealist tradition—but not only. His closest kin are those who make the impossible legible: Dalí, Magritte, Escher. But unlike many surrealists, Quintin doesn’t aim to unsettle. He aims to awaken.

In that, he shares something with the Visionary Art movement of Northern California—the psychedelic spiritualists of the 1960s and their heirs. But where their work often explodes with color and chaos, Quintin’s vision is slower, quieter, more classical. His is a sacred geometry of thought and feeling.

He is, in the best sense, a bridge. Between Europe and America. Between precision and emotion. Between the tree and the dream.

Where to See His Work and What to Look For

Quintin is currently represented by Lorin Gallery in Los Angeles and Paris, with upcoming shows at Morrison Gallery in Kent, Connecticut. His past exhibitions include solo and group shows across California, Paris, Seoul, and New York.

If you encounter his work in person, take your time. Let your eyes wander. Look twice. Look through.

Notice the metaphors buried in the bark. The layers behind the face. The color that feels like music.

Beauty as Defiance, Art as Sanctuary

Christian Quintin’s art is not a detour from reality. It is a reentry into its hidden dimension—the one you feel when you stand beneath a storm-colored sky, or close your eyes and remember the smell of the sea.

In a culture of speed and spectacle, he reminds us of slowness, of intricacy, of care. His work is not loud, but it echoes. It does not preach, but it moves.

He shows us that beauty is not escape—it is a form of resistance. And art, when made with attention and soul, becomes what one curator called it: a “wondrous sanctuary for the soul.”

See More:

christianquintin.com

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/christian-quintin/feed/ 0 21775
Fran Rodriguez: Profound Visionary Art will Conquer your Imagination https://surrealismtoday.com/fran-rodriguez-profound-visionary-art-will-conquer-your-imagination/ https://surrealismtoday.com/fran-rodriguez-profound-visionary-art-will-conquer-your-imagination/#respond Sun, 21 Jul 2024 14:30:11 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=21005 About the Artist

Fran Rodriguez is “lacabezaenlasnubes” (Spanish for “head in the clouds”). He is a visionary digital artist whose work challenges conventional perceptions of reality. Born in Torrelavega, Cantabria, in Northern Spain, Fran’s artistic journey has led him from the verdant landscapes of his hometown to the vibrant streets of Barcelona, with a significant stint in Madrid along the way.

Artistic Vision and Style

Fran Rodriguez’s artwork is profoundly influenced by his early fascination with surrealism and psychedelia. This foundation has evolved into a unique perspective that challenges the boundaries of conventional perception. His digital creations are characterized by three primary elements:

Surreal Landscapes

Rodriguez masterfully merges elements of nature with fantastical and otherworldly scenes, creating environments where the boundaries between reality and imagination blur. His works often feature:

  • An astronaut suspended within the Pantheon in Rome, bathed in light from the oculus, juxtaposing ancient architecture with futuristic exploration.
  • A solitary figure traversing desert dunes beneath a star-studded sky, their form seamlessly blending into the sand, while a massive planet looms in the background.
  • Modern dwellings suspended over Earth in the vastness of space, presenting a surreal vision of human habitation.

Psychedelic Influences

Rodriguez’s art harnesses vibrant colors and abstract forms to evoke a profound sense of wonder and exploration.

Bloom Boom – Fran Rodriquez

Notable examples include:

  • Explosive bursts of polychromatic flowers set against azure skies, creating a visual symphony of color and form.
  • Abstract compositions featuring vivid hues, such as a desert scene where a portal tears open the fabric of reality, revealing a celestial vista.
  • Human figures enveloped by brilliant orange blossoms, set against backdrops of surreal planetary landscapes.

Digital Mastery

Leveraging cutting-edge digital tools, Rodriguez crafts intricate details and imaginative compositions that challenge our perception of reality.

Space Swing – Fran Rodruguez

His technical prowess is evident in pieces such as:

  • A young girl on a swing, suspended high above the Earth, with the cosmos serving as a breathtaking backdrop.
  • A bridge stretching across a cosmic landscape, with vehicles journeying towards a horizon painted with stars.
  • Floating frames capturing fragments of starry skies, encircled by flowing fabrics and celestial bodies hovering over tranquil seas.

For Rodriguez, the visible world represents merely a fraction of a greater, hidden reality—a tantalizing glimpse of an iceberg’s tip breaking the surface of our consciousness. His art serves as a portal, inviting viewers to question their perceptions and explore the rich, often surreal landscapes of the subconscious mind.

Through his meticulous digital craftsmanship, Rodriguez captures the essence of a world where imagination reigns supreme, and the boundaries of reality are constantly redefined. His work not only challenges our visual senses but also prompts us to contemplate the nature of existence and our place within the vast, mysterious universe.

Philosophy

At the core of Fran’s work lies a profound belief: what we perceive through our senses is only a small part of a vast, unseen universe. This conviction has become more than just an artistic approach; it’s a life project, a constant quest to unveil the mysteries lurking beneath the surface of everyday reality.

Signals – Fran Rodriguez

Through his work, Fran encourages us to look beyond the obvious, to seek out the extraordinary hidden within the ordinary. His restless spirit and boundless imagination fuel dreams of future adventures, from the icy wilderness of Alaska to the unexplored terrains of distant planets, all of which influence his artistic output.

Collections and Availability

Fran Rodriguez’s captivating artwork is available for purchase through various platforms:

  • Pixels: Offers a range of prints including canvas, framed, and metal prints.
  • iCanvas: Features over 100 items including popular pieces like “Holynight” and “Swing”.
  • Saatchi Art: Provides a selection of his works, including paintings, photography, and prints.
  • Fine Art America: Another platform where his art can be bought in various formats such as tapestries and greeting cards.
  • BIG Wall Décor: Specializes in large-scale prints of his surreal digital images.

Use coupon code “SurrealismToday20” to get 20% your with Big Wall Decor order.

Connect with Fran

Experience the world through Fran’s unique lens:

Join Fran on his artistic journey as he continues to explore the depths of perception and imagination, challenging us all to keep our heads in the clouds and our minds open to the infinite possibilities that lie just beyond our everyday view.

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/fran-rodriguez-profound-visionary-art-will-conquer-your-imagination/feed/ 0 21005
Draumir’s Beautiful Creatures https://surrealismtoday.com/draumirs-beautiful-creatures/ https://surrealismtoday.com/draumirs-beautiful-creatures/#respond Sat, 09 Mar 2024 15:52:31 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=20829 Working with Draumir on the “Beautiful Creatures” video was an absolute dream. From the first time we heard the hazy, hypnotic track, we knew it called for visuals that matched its surreal, mind-bending vibe.

Beautiful Creatures by Draumir

About Draumir

The Norwegian band Draumir is Alexandra Bråten (vocals) and Jo Frøytlog (vocals/instruments). Draumir is releasing their third album in 2024, and the single Beautiful Creatures was released on February 25th.

Draumir

In Beautiful Creatures, the listener is invited into a timeless sonic universe with noise, swarms of mandolins, drum machines and shimmering electric guitars. Beautiful Creatures was recorded in several versions, but the version that was eventually preferred stays close to the original demo recording. Vocalist Alexandra elaborates:

«We’ve often talked about how something quite special often happens very early in a recording process, and how this special quality slips away from us as the work progresses. This time, we were very conscious of avoiding just that. Many of the elements that make up Beautiful Creatures were done very quickly, without necessarily the intention of them staying all the way through.”

Beautiful Creatures

Beautiful Creatures is written and produced by Draumir and mixed by Phill Brown.

About the Music Video

We plumbed the depths of strange fairytales, splicing together fragmented scenes that blur the lines between reality and fantasy.

Is the ominous forest morphing into strange cathedrals? That fox and woman presiding over it all? Just tiny glimpses into the delirious dream realm we crafted frame-by-frame.

We relished layering unsettling details amid the lush beauty – you’ll spot sinister eyes peering from shadowy corners if you look closely enough.

From conjuring bioluminescent creatures to subtly warping the fabric of the world itself, it was alchemy of the highest order. Draumir’s shimmering soundscapes were our constant guide, allowing the visuals to organically mutate and flow like a lucid reverie.

I think we bottled strange magic with this one. The rare alchemy that occurs when exploring uncharted territory.

The first single is Beautiful Creatures was released on (2/25) and can be streamed now:

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/draumirs-beautiful-creatures/feed/ 0 20829
Johfra Bosschart: The Occult Surrealist https://surrealismtoday.com/johfra-bosschart-occult-surrealist/ Sat, 06 May 2023 22:32:45 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?page_id=19669 Johfra Bosschart (1919-1998) was a Dutch painter known for his surrealist and mystical paintings that often incorporated astrological symbolism. He was born in Rotterdam, Netherlands, and studied at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague.

In the 1950s, Bosschart became interested in astrology and began incorporating astrological symbolism into his paintings. He eventually became a prominent figure in astrological art, and his work has been featured in numerous publications and exhibitions.

Bosschart’s style is often described as a blend of surrealism, symbolism, and mystical elements. His paintings are known for their intricate details, vivid colors, and dreamlike imagery. His work often depicted mythical creatures, ancient symbols, and otherworldly landscapes.

Early Life

Born Franciscus Johannes Gijsbertus van den Berg in Rotterdam, Netherlands, in 1919, Johfra Bosschart was destined to be an artist. He grew up in a world crumbling under the weight of the Second World War, a time of upheaval that would later be reflected in his art. His father was a talented draftsman and exposed his son to the world of artistic expression from a young age.

Johfra Bosschart’s journey into art started in earnest when he attended the Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague. Here, he first encountered the works of surrealist masters, such as Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, and Max Ernst, whose influence would later be evident in his creations. Bosschart’s passion for the occult and esoteric knowledge was ignited during this period. He began exploring the mystical side of life, which would become a central theme in his art.

Maldoror Series

One of the most striking and memorable works by Bosschart is the Maldoror series. Inspired by the 19th-century French poet Comte de Lautréamont’s “Les Chants de Maldoror,” the series consists of paintings depicting fantastic beasts and monstrous figures. These grotesque and horrifying images are a perfect example of Bosschart’s unique blend of surrealist art and the dark world of the occult.

The Maldoror series showcases Bosschart’s talent for rendering the nightmarish and the macabre, which would later be referred to as “monster brains” by some art critics. These works were controversial for their time, as they were seen as a form of degenerate art, challenging the conventions of traditional aesthetics and societal norms.

Johfra Bosschart’s artistry went beyond mere visual appeal; it was a journey into the realms of the subconscious and mystical. Take, for instance, his acclaimed Zodiac series. Each painting in this series was not just a mere representation of astrological signs but a complex tapestry woven with esoteric symbols and hidden meanings. Bosschart meticulously researched astrological lore and symbolism, infusing each painting with layers of meaning. For example, the ‘Leo’ painting isn’t just an illustration of the lion sign; it incorporates alchemical symbols and mythological references, creating a visual narrative that invites the viewer to delve deeper into the mysteries of the cosmos. This series, completed in reverse order starting with Pisces, was a significant departure from traditional astrological art, offering a unique fusion of surrealism with mystical themes that captivated and intrigued the art world.1, 2

The Zodiac Series

Perhaps the most famous of Bosschart’s works are his Zodiac posters. This series consists of twelve paintings, each representing a sign of the zodiac, with symbolic elements deeply rooted in esoteric knowledge. From the ethereal beauty of Aquarius to the fiery energy of Aries, the Zodiac series showcases Bosschart’s ability to infuse the surreal with the mystical.

The creation of the Zodiac series was a transformative experience for Bosschart, as it allowed him to break free from the constraints of traditional artistic techniques and embrace his true calling as an occult surrealist. The series was completed in reverse order, starting with Pisces and culminating in the powerful and enigmatic image of Aries. The Zodiac series not only captured the public’s imagination but also solidified Bosschart’s reputation as an artistic force to be reckoned with.

Amsterdam 1981 and the Following Year:

By the early 1980s, Johfra Bosschart had established himself as a leading figure in surrealist art. In 1981, he held a major retrospective of his work in Amsterdam, showcasing his vast collection of paintings and drawings. This exhibition was a turning point for Bosschart, bringing him international acclaim and cementing his place in the annals of art history.

The following year, 1982, proved to be a significant one for the artist Johfra Bosschart, as his work gained recognition and admiration from critics and the general public. During this time, Bosschart’s artwork was featured in several European exhibitions and galleries, exposing a wider audience to his unique blend of surrealism, mysticism, and fantastic beasts.

Johfra Bosschart: Occult Surrealist:

One of the key aspects that set Bosschart apart from his contemporaries was his profound interest in occult and esoteric knowledge. This fascination permeated his work, turning his canvases into portals to a hidden world of mysticism and spirituality. As an occult surrealist, Bosschart’s paintings were not merely artistic expressions but also intricate tapestries of symbols and arcane wisdom.

His use of esoteric elements and themes in his art allowed Bosschart to explore the depths of the human psyche, unearthing the fears, desires, and mysteries that lurk beneath the surface. This approach to art, coupled with his extraordinary talent for blending the surreal with the mystical, made Johfra Bosschart a truly unique artist whose work continues to inspire and captivate to this day.

While Bosschart was never directly linked to this specific movement, his work certainly pushed the boundaries of conventional artistic expression. His paintings often featured unsettling imagery, such as monstrous figures and nightmarish creatures, challenging viewers to confront their fears and anxieties. This provocative approach to art garnered criticism and admiration but ultimately helped solidify Bosschart’s reputation as a groundbreaking and influential artist.

Legacy

Johfra Bosschart passed away in 1998, but his legacy lives on through his mesmerizing works of art. His paintings continue to be exhibited and admired by art enthusiasts worldwide, with many recognizing him as a pioneer in surrealist and occult art. The themes and techniques he employed in his work have inspired countless artists who came after him, ensuring that the surrealism of Bosschart will never be forgotten.

Bosschart’s art is a testament to the power of the imagination and the importance of challenging the boundaries of conventional artistic expression. From his early life to the fantastic beasts of his Maldoror series and the esoteric symbols of his Zodiac posters, the story of Johfra Bosschart is one of a visionary who dared to explore the depths of the human psyche through the surreal and the mystical. As an occult surrealist, his work continues to captivate and inspire, leaving a lasting impact on art.

Johfra Bosschart’s work, steeped in surrealism and mysticism, continues to resonate with audiences today, offering a unique window into the human psyche and spiritual exploration. His paintings are not just artifacts of the past but living pieces of art that speak to our ongoing quest for meaning in a complex world. For those looking to experience the enchanting world of Bosschart first-hand, several of his works are on display in prestigious galleries and museums across Europe. Notably, the Zodiac series, with its intricate symbolism and astrological themes, can be viewed in various art exhibitions, providing a mesmerizing experience that transcends time. For digital explorers, high-resolution images of his paintings are available on select online art platforms, allowing a closer examination of his intricate details and profound symbolism from anywhere in the world. This accessibility ensures that Bosschart’s legacy continues to inspire and challenge viewers, just as it did during his lifetime.2

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was Johfra Bosschart?

Johfra Bosschart was a Dutch surrealist painter born in 1919 in Rotterdam, Netherlands. He is best known for his unique blend of surrealism and occult themes in his artwork, which often features fantastic beasts and esoteric symbols.

What is Johfra Bosschart’s real name?

Johfra Bosschart was born Franciscus Johannes Gijsbertus van den Berg. He later adopted the pseudonym “Johfra Bosschart,” which combines his first name and his mother’s maiden name.

What influenced Johfra Bosschart’s art?

Bosschart was heavily influenced by the works of surrealist masters such as Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, and Max Ernst. He was also deeply interested in occult and esoteric knowledge, which played a significant role in shaping the themes and symbols present in his artwork.

What is the Maldoror series?

The Maldoror series is a collection of paintings by Johfra Bosschart inspired by the 19th-century French poet Comte de Lautréamont’s “Les Chants de Maldoror.” The series features grotesque and nightmarish creatures, showcasing Bosschart’s talent for combining surrealism and macabre.

What is the Zodiac series?

The Zodiac series is a collection of twelve paintings by Johfra Bosschart, each representing a sign of the zodiac. The series is known for its intricate symbolism and esoteric themes, blending surrealism with mysticism and astrology.

What is “degenerate art,” and how does it relate to Johfra Bosschart?

“Degenerate art” is a term that originated in Nazi Germany to describe art that did not conform to the government’s standards of aesthetics and morality. Although Bosschart was not directly associated with this movement, his work often pushed the boundaries of conventional artistic expression and featured unsettling imagery that some considered degenerate.

How has Johfra Bosschart influenced other artists?

Johfra Bosschart’s unique blend of surrealism, mysticism, and fantastic beasts has inspired countless artists who came after him. His groundbreaking approach to art and his exploration of the human psyche through the surreal and the mystical have left a lasting impact on the art world.

When did Johfra Bosschart pass away?

Johfra Bosschart passed away on November 6, 1998.

Where can I see Johfra Bosschart’s artwork?

Johfra Bosschart’s artwork can be found in various galleries and exhibitions worldwide. Many of his works are also available online for viewing through various art websites and social media platforms dedicated to his work.

]]>
19669
Vincent Fink: Surrealistic Iterations https://surrealismtoday.com/vincent-fink-surrealistic-iterations/ https://surrealismtoday.com/vincent-fink-surrealistic-iterations/#respond Mon, 14 Sep 2020 16:00:00 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=14932 Editor’s Note: Vincent Fink’s limited edition prints are now available for purchase in the Surrealism Today online store.

Artist Statement

In the pursuit to better redefine modern surrealism, I often find myself indulging in the vibrancy of color and concise composition with flaring elements of Sacred Geometry. The same level of intense detail is implored in all of my work but this series attempts to focus on the singularity and realism of the objects in my visions. I want to convey the world through another dimension: To see the hidden geometry that makes up everything in the universe. My education in 3D animation comes back in a surprising way as I break down complex organisms into their most basic shapes much like polygon modeling.

Allowing myself to fully run free in my mind, I travel to any environment or vacuum my heart desires. I am traveling everywhere I want to go, so I can be closer to my dreams and become better at actualizing them. This project has been an awakening of my true self that needed all previous lessons to attain.

Iterations have proven to be my strongest vehicle for exploring my fascination with shapes and dreamlike imagery via oil and acrylic paintings on canvas and panel. Dreams represent a higher dimension of consciousness to me, documented by Edgar Casey to be a medium of infinite insight, problem-solving and premonition. It seems only natural for one to explore this realm of higher consciousness on a 2 dimensional medium with the higher spacial dimensions, where Platonic Solids, Archemedian Solids and other geometries seem to unlock a representation of the underlying structure of nature.

The work also has hidden implications to the impact of evolution and attaining knowledge, for better or worse. We yield so much potential with recent discoveries, but as a race, we seem to be struggling with the same concerns of our ancestors. Survival is an on-going theme in my work especially in the face of misused information. I’m concerned with the persistence of imbalance in a technological age that could unite the world in abundance. The artwork will definitely cause a lot of progressive thinking and discussion about the unification of art and science, power and knowledge, predator and prey.

My goal is to blend the surreal with the real. To walk the lines of what is a thought and what is a movement, and mostly, to reach a higher state of mind through art.

Biography

Born April 1st, 1984 and growing up in the ever-crowding greater Houston area, Vincent Fink is an award-winning contemporary surrealist & full-time artist working out of his Winter Street Studio in the Arts District where he tirelessly adds to a multitude of expansive projects. His first series, Atlas Metamorphosis, started in 2010 with vigorously detailed greyscale sumi ink drawings spawned from a lucid dream. Since then, his art evolves from his series of Sacred Geometry Surrealism paintings, called Iterations, to multimedia public art and installations including sculpture and animation. The subconscious, with its symbolic story-telling, has always played a part in his cultural narrative message.

Hand Crafted Tetrahedrons

After attaining a degree in Media Arts & Animation from The Art Institute of Houston, he worked as a graphic designer searching in life for a higher purpose, a direction with his artistic abilities, yet was extremely lost. Then one night, with a sketch pad by his bed, he dreamt his future and immediately awoke to record it. In his subconscious state, he saw the first completed piece that would establish his art career. This series became known as the Atlas Metamorphosis and continues to take us through the 4 stages of an other-worldly, gigantic god-like beetle’s evolution. Each stage of its life cycle is accompanied by a new cultural empire or era of civilization.

77: A Fleshy Facade, A Cryptic Charade

This series won him the Talent Call Award, The Big Show – Best of, as well as a Hunting Art Prize finalist, twice, along with many shows and articles online and in print, but that is just one hemisphere of this, now, activated imagination. His second, most prolific series of acrylic and oil paintings called Iterations also garners equal prestige and focuses on his love for surrealism and sacred geometry.

03: Survival

Editor’s Note: Vincent Fink’s limited edition prints are now available for purchase in the Surrealism Today online store.

Vincent Fink Elsewhere on the Web

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/vincent-fink-surrealistic-iterations/feed/ 0 14932
Albane Simon https://surrealismtoday.com/albane-simon/ https://surrealismtoday.com/albane-simon/#respond Fri, 25 Oct 2019 12:34:16 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=14186 About Albane Simon

Imagine a world where linear time has lost all relevance. A place where past memories and future visions dance in a familiar present gone awry, this is where nightmares collide with lucid clarity. Touching on topics diverse as ecology, science, architecture, and spirituality.

instagram.com/albanesurrealcollagist/

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/albane-simon/feed/ 0 14186
James McCarthy https://surrealismtoday.com/james-mccarthy/ https://surrealismtoday.com/james-mccarthy/#respond Mon, 14 Oct 2019 12:28:33 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=14110 James McCarthy is a surrealistic landscape painter. McCarthy’s psychedelic/cosmic mindscapes wrestle with the concepts of space-time and the afterlife.

Artist’s Statement

I’m a surrealist but I also consider myself a landscape painter.

I like to paint biomorphic forms but I’m also interested in capturing the moods of various landscapes.

I like to depict the weather and the seasons – the seasons especially because seasons note the passing of time.

Winter has a special meaning for me as well. It represents solitude and wonder.

Much of my work is inspired by ‘mindscape’ music such as New Age, psychedelic, certain classical pieces, prog rock and medieval music.

As I grow older I’ve become increasingly more intrigued by what life’s Final Door has in store for us. Is it a doorway to eternity or oblivion?

James McCarthy on DeviantArt
James McCarthy on Facebook

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/james-mccarthy/feed/ 0 14110
Maura Holden https://surrealismtoday.com/maura-holden/ https://surrealismtoday.com/maura-holden/#respond Tue, 23 Apr 2019 13:00:49 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=12102

MAURA HOLDEN ARTISTS BIOGRAPHY

Maura Holden was born in 1967 in Philadelphia PA. She spent most of her  childhood absorbed in a multi-dimensional daydream, which formed the foundation  of her visionary quest as it continues today. Dreaming, drawing and  water-coloring continually throughout her youth, Maura was able to present her first solo show at age sixteen, in the family home, with a large body of  detailed paintings and drawings of inner landscapes populated by spirits and  supernatural beings.

Though Maura’s very early work was definitely fantastic – heavily influenced  by Max Ernst, Dali, and her own mystical dreams – she did not anticipate the  full flowering of her visionary kinship until seeing the art of Ernst Fuchs.  This profound event occurred when she was twenty-four, at a party, where someone  handed her a book of Fuchs’ art. From the moment she held the book, Maura has  been a devoted fan, strongly influenced by Fuchs and his lineage.

Maura has never had formal painting instruction, but has pieced together her  own education from a combination of book research, experiments with art  materials and techniques, looking at other artists’ work, and a lot of time at  the easel.

In 2002 Maura had her first solo gallery show, “Carnivorous Architecture”, at  Gallery in the Woods in Brattleboro, Vermont. The show brought Maura a small  flurry of recognition, leading soon afterwards to a year-long group show, “High
on Life”, at the American Visionary Art Museum, followed the next year by  another, “Golden Blessings” at the same museum. Her contribution of five  paintings to the first of these shows brought many new friends and connections,  and Tom Patterson, the curator of “High on Life”, later went on to write a  feature article about Maura and her work for Raw Vision Magazine, issue 56,  Autumn 2006.

Maura’s involvement with AVAM and Raw Vision linked her to the Outsider Art   movement, which encompasses Art Brut and all self-taught artists.

In 2003 Maura participated in the Society for Art of the Imagination’s “Brave  Destiny” show, at the Williamsburg Art and Historical Society, again  re-enforcing her emphasis on the fantastic.

After this show, it would be three years before Maura unfolded further into  the public sphere. In 2003, she embarked on an experiment in consciousness,  repairing to a hermit’s cabin in rural Vermont, beginning a new shamanic  nature-oriented phase, and a new body of work….

For three years, she remained in the cabin, without running water,  electricity or the media.  Secluded in the forest, she experienced a suspension  of time and ordinary perception, and rediscovered, through astral journeys, what  she came to think of as the archaic human mindset, brimming with myth, magic and  archetypes…

This period constituted a death and re-birth. Maura welcomed the breakdown of  the older structures of her world-view, and passed from her own version of 20th  century consciousness into a more basic or universal human consciousness. She  asserts that she lost her identity during this time, and merged with the  forest’s myriad woven sound and sentience… A sense of “becoming nobody” allowed  her to release outworn thoughts and begin fumblingly to manifest a new kind of  vision. The realms of Earth-aliens, faeries and the geometry of plants and  minerals began to replace the ruinous anthropomorphic cities of her earlier  period. A new outlook began to take root. With the tremendous inflow of energy  and novelty this process unleashed, Maura began, but did not finish, roughly  fifteen paintings, ranging from the epic and arduous to the simple but
characteristically delicate and time-consuming…

In 2006 she left the cabin and built an amateur website for her art. The  publisher Jon Beinart soon discovered the website, and included her work in  “Metamorphosis – 50 Contemporary Surreal, Fantastic and Visionary Artists”, her  first compilation book. From there, other online and magazine publications also  contacted her, and she discovered her love of books and publishing…

Around 2007 Maura became pen pals with Laurence Caruana, at first  corresponding with him mainly about philosophical, spiritual and aesthetic  ideas. Their friendship became more personal over time, eventually leading Maura  to participate directly in the Visionary Art community. In 2011 she joined  Laurence, Amanda Sage and Andrew Gonzales in teaching the “Visions in the  Mischtechnik” seminar, in Tori Superiore, Italy, where she lead a drawing  intensive. She will return to Tori Superiore to teach painting at the seminar in  2012.

Links:
The Invisible College Magazine, 4th Edition 
Visionary Revue: The Cosmic Mountain – Maura Holden

MAURA HOLDEN on Fantastic Visions

via VAGallery.com

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/maura-holden/feed/ 0 12102
Tetat Ton https://surrealismtoday.com/tetat-ton/ https://surrealismtoday.com/tetat-ton/#respond Sun, 21 Apr 2019 14:00:50 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=12091 Tetat Ton is a painter from Bangkok, Thailand.

Tetat Ton Facebook

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/tetat-ton/feed/ 0 12091
Charles Burwell https://surrealismtoday.com/charles-burwell/ https://surrealismtoday.com/charles-burwell/#comments Mon, 21 Jan 2019 13:35:41 +0000 https://surrealismtoday.com/?p=11804

Artist Statement

   At a very young age when I had only a vague idea of the meaning, it was predicted that I was an artist. This was from observations by my elementary school teachers and encouragement from my Mother, who not only appreciated art but was also a talented painter. The title of artist tended to give me a kind of identity…a suggestion that I was gifted in a certain way. With only that assumption as my guide, I pursued drawing and painting without academic training.  My earliest attempts were produced by my sense of awe when pouring through books and art magazines. The works of a famous surrealist caught my eye at age twelve.  From that time forward I would say that I was basically self-taught. That is not necessarily a compliment. There are areas I will never be proficient in yet the simple love of creating art drove me to figure things out along the way.  It wasn’t until I was 31 that I availed myself of some formal art training but by then I had already spent many years working in commercial graphics, technical illustration, animation, photography, and film production. Those earliest accomplishments tutored my creativity but did little to satisfy my urge to paint large meaningful works. That would have to wait a while. A very fortunate aspect of my career in the earlier years was the wide variety of artistic areas I managed to find work in. In each decade from the seventies, I augmented commercial art with a few fine art paintings. Results were slow at first, I was yet to emerge from all the strict confines of commercial work to the freedom of just painting for imagination’s sake.

   I partnered in a three-man show in 1988 and hung a one-man show in 1990. After a serious painters block in the mid-nineties, I re-awoke determined to attend to a lifelong desire…that of large canvases with more serious intent. As the turn of the century approached, I couldn’t escape a distinct feeling that something big was going to happen. I began painting futuristic images inspired by the notion that entering the third millennium should be punctuated by some visionary artwork.

   I’ve always remembered the words of my favorite art teacher; ‘produce a sense of light direction’. I have only reached that lofty goal on occasion. In some of my recent works, I’ve attempted to capture beauty in the midst of calamity to produce a sense of wonderment and emotional response. And of course, there’s often a curiosity about symbols present and their interpretation. So after a significant time spent in seclusion, I offer a few pieces that came into being in the past 6-8 years.  These four canvases are connected;  Surrealistic Quadriptic.  There’s more from the past and hopefully from the future as well.

More: surrealprecog.com

]]>
https://surrealismtoday.com/charles-burwell/feed/ 2 11804