Kate Peel - Red Wall





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Kate Peel's Red Wall is a landscape giclée from 2021, measuring 70 cm by 49 cm, hand signed, in excellent condition, produced in the United Kingdom and sold direct from the artist, in a limited edition of 30 (3/30) with red and green colours.
Description from the seller
Exploring psychological and cultural permutations of space guide the focus of Kate Peel's practice.
When making work she thinks about how changing the context of space can relocate it into a new spectrum of reference.
Her work is deeply embedded in the appropriation of images and material. She see's this as a kind of recycling of possible meaning that touches on both the personal and the cultural.
The work is influenced by popular culture and Pop Art and questions of representation while breaking things down and rebuilding them in a somewhat surreal vision.
The work engages with drawing, printmaking and digital practices.
Kate Peel’s work contains intricate details while also seeming quite minimalist. Therefore, it pops out and allures you to view the work and think about it more than once rather than walking past. It works to catch your eye and interpret it in your way while also contrasting itself beautifully that it allows for reflection on the work itself.
– Joshua Obara Norwood (Curator and Director @ the Meta Space Gallery
Exploring psychological and cultural permutations of space guide the focus of Kate Peel's practice.
When making work she thinks about how changing the context of space can relocate it into a new spectrum of reference.
Her work is deeply embedded in the appropriation of images and material. She see's this as a kind of recycling of possible meaning that touches on both the personal and the cultural.
The work is influenced by popular culture and Pop Art and questions of representation while breaking things down and rebuilding them in a somewhat surreal vision.
The work engages with drawing, printmaking and digital practices.
Kate Peel’s work contains intricate details while also seeming quite minimalist. Therefore, it pops out and allures you to view the work and think about it more than once rather than walking past. It works to catch your eye and interpret it in your way while also contrasting itself beautifully that it allows for reflection on the work itself.
– Joshua Obara Norwood (Curator and Director @ the Meta Space Gallery

