Been wanting to comment on this for awhile. Colors and patterns remind me of cover artwork and a hotel sculpture in a scene for the 1968 French film Playtime by Jacques Tati. Third in a seires of four films (the others being Mr. Hulot’s Holiday, Mon Oncle, and Traffic) it in humorous ways highlight how old Paris was torn down to make way for concrete and steel building which have no flavor or identity just sterile uniformity. In a piece like this I see the same symbolizes the girders of buildings running into each other creating sprawl not progress.
nodakami
Beautiful abstract painting
rachelle
thankyou
mare
Yes, I can see rage here…. nice one!
Steven Torrisi
Been wanting to comment on this for awhile. Colors and patterns remind me of cover artwork and a hotel sculpture in a scene for the 1968 French film Playtime by Jacques Tati. Third in a seires of four films (the others being Mr. Hulot’s Holiday, Mon Oncle, and Traffic) it in humorous ways highlight how old Paris was torn down to make way for concrete and steel building which have no flavor or identity just sterile uniformity. In a piece like this I see the same symbolizes the girders of buildings running into each other creating sprawl not progress.
rachelle replied
well my original title for this piece was gridlock but i thought people might relate more to the colours of rage thanks for interest
rachelle replied
well my original title for this piece was gridlock but i thought people might relate more to the colours of rage thanks for interest