Tara Nix
Prior to attending Sheridan College for the Visual and Creative Arts program Tara also received her BA from the University of Ottawa with a major in General Arts and a Minor in Theory and History of Art. She works in a variety of mediums including inks, acrylics, oils, pencil, charcoal, and photography.
Her diverse, raw, and sensational style challenges the constraints of aesthetic through landscapes, graffiti, mixed media, pop art, and experimentation. Her art is designed with the intend to produce a voyeur experience that conveys and captures the atmosphere and diverging locations.
Influenced by the functionality of light in art she constructs visual spectacles that engage and entertain its viewer. Tara intentionally use light to emphasize high contrast, singular light sources, and movement. With the intent to illustrate authentic experiences of current human conditioning.
ARTIST’S STATEMENT
Creating art began as a foundation and form of liberation, self-expression, and belief in the remedial abilities of color. Making art liberates my mind and allows me to enter into a state of euphoria. Having a deep infatuation with color, Canadian landscape, and impressionism painting. I work in a variety of mediums including inks, acrylics, oils, pencils, charcoal, and photography. Wanting to construct a visual spectacle that engages and entertains its viewers my work has become centralized around the functionality of light and color in art. My diverse, raw, and sensational style challenges the constraints of aesthetics through subjects including and using landscapes, graffiti, mixed media, pop art, cityscapes, and experimentation.
Each work of art is intended to produce a voyeur experience that conveys and captures the atmosphere and diverging locations I portray. Uncovering, seizing, emphasizing, and exhibiting key features using light in each composition. Intentionally using light and color to emphasize high contrast, depth, light sources, and movement. Influenced by Bokeh photography my latest series explores creating cityscape paintings using out-of-focus colored circles to represent light in the bustling streets of Toronto, Ontario.
Prior to attending Sheridan College for the Visual and Creative Arts program Tara also received her BA from the University of Ottawa with a major in General Arts and a Minor in Theory and History of Art. She works in a variety of mediums including inks, acrylics, oils, pencil, charcoal, and photography.
Her diverse, raw, and sensational style challenges the constraints of aesthetic through landscapes, graffiti, mixed media, pop art, and experimentation. Her art is designed with the intend to produce a voyeur experience that conveys and captures the atmosphere and diverging locations.
Influenced by the functionality of light in art she constructs visual spectacles that engage and entertain its viewer. Tara intentionally use light to emphasize high contrast, singular light sources, and movement. With the intent to illustrate authentic experiences of current human conditioning.
ARTIST’S STATEMENT
Creating art began as a foundation and form of liberation, self-expression, and belief in the remedial abilities of color. Making art liberates my mind and allows me to enter into a state of euphoria. Having a deep infatuation with color, Canadian landscape, and impressionism painting. I work in a variety of mediums including inks, acrylics, oils, pencils, charcoal, and photography. Wanting to construct a visual spectacle that engages and entertains its viewers my work has become centralized around the functionality of light and color in art. My diverse, raw, and sensational style challenges the constraints of aesthetics through subjects including and using landscapes, graffiti, mixed media, pop art, cityscapes, and experimentation.
Each work of art is intended to produce a voyeur experience that conveys and captures the atmosphere and diverging locations I portray. Uncovering, seizing, emphasizing, and exhibiting key features using light in each composition. Intentionally using light and color to emphasize high contrast, depth, light sources, and movement. Influenced by Bokeh photography my latest series explores creating cityscape paintings using out-of-focus colored circles to represent light in the bustling streets of Toronto, Ontario.
$1,000.00
acrylic on canvas
16x12"
Former mansion condemned waiting for demolition near by Kensington market.
$900.00
acrylic on canvas
12x10"
Farmers field in rural eastern Ontario as autumn takes hold.
$1,000.00
acrylic on canvas
24x18"
This abandoned bridge and pathways sit situated amongst wildlife and farmland off of city road 35 near Stirling, Ontario.
$1,800.00
acrylic on canvas
36x24"
This old pathway leading to the abandoned bridge sits nestled in amongst farmland and wild life near Stirling, Ontario east of city road 35.