Kate Allen’s ambient and impressionistic oil paintings have a dreamlike presence. Creating the illusion of a vibrating space before and beyond the canvas, Allen’s works draw in the gaze.
Blending abstract and recognisable forms, Allen often uses shimmering ‘moir’ patterns, created by the overlap of independent intersecting patterns, to stimulate and confuse the eye of the viewer.
’It is important that the painting can be inhabited, the viewer should be able to move within it’, says Allen.
These works offer the illusion of differing depths and layers within the image competing for dominance. Honeycomb or pixellated patterns built up out of many smaller…
Kate Allen’s ambient and impressionistic oil paintings have a dreamlike presence. Creating the illusion of a vibrating space before and beyond the canvas, Allen’s works draw in the gaze.
Blending abstract and recognisable forms, Allen often uses shimmering ‘moir’ patterns, created by the overlap of independent intersecting patterns, to stimulate and confuse the eye of the viewer.
’It is important that the painting can be inhabited, the viewer should be able to move within it’, says Allen.
These works offer the illusion of differing depths and layers within the image competing for dominance. Honeycomb or pixellated patterns built up out of many smaller dots, alternate as you look at them, so the picture has no definitive order, rather an oscillation.
A kind of more sensuous and sensitive development from the Optical Art of the ’60s, Allen’s work is visually and emotionally vibrant. Although they are cool and non-gestural, these paintings throb as if they had a pulse.
An MA graduate of the Slade School of Fine Art in London, Allen has participated in numerous group shows in 2000. Allen’s work has also featured in Art Review and Vogue.