Matt Arbuckle, Colour Vision, 2022.
Photo Credit
Matt Arbuckle, Colour Vision, 2022.
Photo Credit
Looking at Matt Arbuckle’s paintings, there is a slippage in what appears to be in sight. The ambiguity he’s fashioned creates space to focus on sensations of seeing and being: the adjustment of eyes, a settling in to somewhere or something else veiled and vast, the sheen of textile surfaces as you move across the room, bathing in colour, the sense that brought together like this, Arbuckle’s canvases could be windows into new topographies. Landscapes are an enduring feature of his practice – both in his thinking around place and in the perception of his work. The orientation of the three large canvases that anchor this body of work heightens this reading. It’s new, this landscape format. It belies that there’s a vista somewhere in the folds. You’re staring beyond the windscreen at the ranges, you’re losing the light.
Excerpt from text by Victoria McAdam.
Looking at Matt Arbuckle’s paintings, there is a slippage in what appears to be in sight. The ambiguity he’s fashioned creates space to focus on sensations of seeing and being: the adjustment of eyes, a settling in to somewhere or something else veiled and vast, the sheen of textile surfaces as you move across the room, bathing in colour, the sense that brought together like this, Arbuckle’s canvases could be windows into new topographies. Landscapes are an enduring feature of his practice – both in his thinking around place and in the perception of his work. The orientation of the three large canvases that anchor this body of work heightens this reading. It’s new, this landscape format. It belies that there’s a vista somewhere in the folds. You’re staring beyond the windscreen at the ranges, you’re losing the light.
Excerpt from text by Victoria McAdam.