Wine Sponsor Food Sponsor Whiskey Sponsor
Previous Item Next Item

A Place Far From Here

$3000

Description of the Item:

Register or sign in to buy or bid on this item. Sign in and register buttons are in next section

Want to purchase this item?

REGISTER NOW

Already have an account?

1 Watcher

1

"A Place Far from Here"
by Tom O'Connor

Manifesting depictions of his personal experiences and internal desires, each O'Connor piece often recalls moments of falling in love to the thrills of attraction and connection; they're figments of nostalgia and daydreams of the future. These human stories and inner feelings manifest in gestural and emotive strokes.

Details

  • Medium: Oil on stretched canvas
  • Size: 40" high by 30" wide
  • Shipping: Artwork will be shipped by the artist directly to the purchaser. Purchaser will cover the shipping cost and insurance

Artist Bio

O'Connor is an emotional artist who is driven by his need to create and express.

Growing up between the beach and the city in sub-tropical Queensland strongly influenced his sensibility as an artist. His vivid use of color and expressive forms are a nostalgic marker of his early life. Recently featured by prominent global arts and fashion magazines including ODDA and SICKY, O'Connor has begun carving out a voice in the international art and culture scene.

His process is always kinetic, mining for instruction from his heart and body "Music has the ability to get me out of my head and into my body and this is where ultimately I want to paint and create from" O'Connor is often dancing and moving in-between strokes. "I want people to feel something, I want them to dance too."

O'Connor's high school art assignments at the conservative all boys catholic school he attended would often take over entire classrooms and would be as much about the visual work as the reaction. "For senior year I turned my entire classroom and everyone in it into a thundering storm with swaths of black and grey tulle covering the entire ceiling and projections of lighting strikes bouncing off mirrors around the room. I wanted to see how people reacted, how it made them feel"