|
Christine Alfery is a northern
Wisconsin
based abstract expressionist
artist
who is committed to
creating one of a kind, unique,
original works of art
.
Christine believes that her
abstract paintings are Divinely
inspired
.
She has held this belief for many years and
honors it when she paints. Christine states that there is something
extremely beautiful and powerful within me that emerges when I paint."
She
embraces this feeling and treasures it.
Christine's acrylic and
watercolor paintings
are not pre-planned. Each contemporary piece of art,
evolves. This spontaneity allows Christine's
paintings to reflect the extraordinary character of the special moments
in which the work
was
created.
These
moments are Divine moments for Christine and
are filled with
The Grace
that surrounds her.
There are so many things in this work that
try to influence our "souls" our spirits, her soul, her spirit, so many
things that try to steal The Grace, The Divine within us. Christine
protects this spirit in her soul, and savors it every time she revisits
one of her paintings.
She invites you to allow your soul your spirit to
visit hers through her art work.
|
|
Christine Alfery is a post modernist
abstract expressionist painter
. Just what is abstract expressionism?
Abstract Expressionism is a movement in U.S. painting that began
in the late 1940s. Many artist's today, such as Christine, still
paint in the
abstract expressionism
style
because they relate to the abstract expressionist movement and
what it stands for. Early in the 1930's abstract expressionism
influenced by the radical paintings of Arshle Gorky and Hans
Hofman and by the immigration in the late 1930s and early '40s
of many European avant-garde artists to New York. The abstract
expressionist movement itself is generally regarded as having
begun with the paintings done by Jackson Pollock, Robert
Raushenberg and Willem de Kooning in the late 1940s and early
'50s. They would gather together in a New York cafe after
painting in their studios all day and talk about what they
believed in and how they were expressing it in their works.
Christine like these artists resists the leveling of culture
into categories and pre-packaged notions of how things should be
.
Other artists who came to be associated with the abstract
expressionist movement include
Newman,
Adolph Gottlief, Robert Motherwell, Lee Krasner and Ad Reinhard. Franz Kline,
Mark Rothko, Clyfford Still and Philip Guston, Cy Twombly and Helen
Frankenthaler,
Christine Alfery easily associates with the
artists from the abstract expressionist movement. In her paintings she makes
marks that cry out their own sense of freedom and independence. Christine
discards the notion of painting figurative, representational subject-matter. She
believes that each mark she paints, each line she paints each color she places
on a painting has their own history and it's own subject matter. Each is a thing
in itself, yet each relate to the others that are placed with it. The unified
whole of her paintings is that they are eternal and can become something new
every time they are viewed. Christine's Alfery's abstract expressionist
paintings assimilate the style and freedom of these earlier artists but
especially her paintings resemble the work of Frankenthaler, de Kooning and
Twombly.
The abstract expressionist movement comprised many
painting styles but shared several characteristics. The
abstract expressionist
paintings were
usually abstract that is they depicted forms not found in the natural world
.
Abstract expressionists emphasized freedom of emotional
expression, technique, and execution; they displayed a single unified,
undifferentiated field, network, or other image in unstructured space. The
canvases abstract expressionists paintings were painted on were large, to
enhance the visual effect and project monumentality, power, freedom and personal
expression. The abstract expressionist movement had a great impact on U.S. and
European art in the 1950s; it marked the shift of the creative centre of modern
painting from Paris to New York.
|