1 hour ago · Art · hide · 0 comments

View fullsize View fullsize Robert Duxbury paints watercolours that refuse to behave like watercolours.The Melbourne-based painter works with brooding colour palettes and soft-edged figures that feel lifted from Pre-Raphaelite canvases, but the medium is watercolour on paper, pushed until it mimics the weight and depth of oil paint. The technique is deliberate collision: Chinese Gongbi discipline meeting European romanticism's emotional excess. View fullsize View fullsize Duxbury spent years living in Guangdong Province, China, studying traditional ink wash and Gongbi painting through observation, museum visits, and trial and error. What stuck wasn't just the brushwork but the compositional logic: balance, negative space, the way a figure can float without grounding. View fullsize View fullsize He carried that back to a studio practice built around introverted themes. The subjects are almost always beautiful youth — languishing, masked, morose — drawn from his own memories of that…

No comments yet. Log in to reply on the Fediverse. Comments will appear here.