Sinking Idols 2003
Michael Roque Collins
Original Painting : Oil on Board
Size : 14x11 in | 36x28 cm
Framed : 1.34x2.14 in | 3x5 cm
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Year2003
Hand SignedArtist Signature is in the Lower Left Corner.
Condition Excellent
Other FrameLarson Juhl Soho Contemporary Frame.(floating)
Provenance / HistoryPrivite art showing in 2003 in the resident of Brad Simmons in Oklahoma City, President of Simmons Petroleum Inc - Gas Company. The art was on display for purchase however it was part of an art exhibit in Santa Fe, NM at the LewAllen Gallery. Where we traveled to and saw it on display.
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
LID115788
Michael Roque Collins - United States
Art Brokerage: Michael Roque Collins American Artist: b.1955. Born in Texas in 1955, Collins earned a BFA from the University of Houston in 1978 and later earned an MFA in painting from Southern Methodist University. Since the mid-1970s he has directed the Lowell Collins School of Art in Houston; he has also held positions on the art faculties of several universities. Michael Roque Collins produces some of the most deeply affecting figurative expressionism seen today in contemporary art. His lush oil paintings rip deep meaning from thick paint and bold line. Layering and slicing with his brush and palette knife, he mines the metaphorical mysteries of archetypal symbols—especially those of regeneration and renewal. For both his style and subject matter, Collins has been described by critics as one of the most unique painters whose work is exhibited in Santa Fe. His oil-on-linen paintings and a new body of mixed media paintings on photographs bear homage to the transcendence that can be found in compassionate contemplation of the cycling and balance between enlightenment and darkness, creation and destruction, order and disorder, both in the human condition and the natural world. It has been said that his paintings have an American spiritual resonance with the paintings of Anselm Kiefer or Gerhard Richter. They are conduits to memories that lie deeply buried in our childhood psyches as well as universal, archetypal memories of the sublime. In his paintings we find Blakean beauty resident in the terrible. An imagistic light seems to come from within, augmenting the sense of mystery and transforming metaphorical fields of darkness into parables of hope for the future. Collins acknowledges a variety of influences, including Max Beckmann, Charles Burchfield, JWT Turner and the Hudson River School. Primitive art objects collected by his father gave him early exposure to strong and direct expressions of the supernatural within the natural environment of daily life. Though these influences were important to the developing foundations of his art, his distinctive style originates from his personal conception of light, value, color and lines. Ideas emerge from his dreams, revealing visions of the conscious and unconscious mind. Listings wanted.