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Christian Develter, Think Design Magazine's Artist of the Month, August...
Christian Develter, Think Design Magazine's Artist of the Month, August 2011
Michael Earle of Think Design Magazine interviews Christian Develter a Belgian artist who has been based in Bangkok since 1996 and who has recently opened his Warp Studio, also in Bangkok.
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(Free-Press-Release.com) August 22, 2011 --
Develter's work combines a European sensibility, based on some traces of art-nouveau and other movements with a strong asian inspiration and reverence for the subject. Strong hues of red dominate a series about China. The colour in his paintings are what instantly draws the eye with the force of vibrant juxtaposition but the viewer will continue to gaze and find the beauty of the subjects and the compositional quality of the light revealing a great depth to the characters being exposed.
Christian Develter, born in Belgium in 1968, grew up with design ambitions and attended the institute of Fine Arts, St Lucas and then the Royal Academy of Fine arts in Antwerp. He studied interior design and then fashion. His parents were very supportive of his direction so long as they saw he could make ends meet. It seems clear to me that his polyvalence in design is an important aid in his work and his remarkable sense of composition. First coming to Thailand to work on interior design, he swiftly migrated into painting and presenting his view of Asian cultures through his work. He carries on the tradition of Chinese portraiture that has gained enormous fame from artists such as You Yuhan, Wei Dong and Zhang Xiaogang. These artists have since the 1990s
presented many interpretations of Chinese culture through massive numbers of representations of Chairman Mao, smiling and distorted, to name just one example. Develter does not follow this form, instead presenting his subjects with a measure of beauty and a depth of understanding of the subjects and the cultures that they represent.
Develter spoke at length about his inspiration and the impact that his portraits achieve. He mentioned that “the way the subjects look at you in the portrait creates a story”. He cited the example of Cambodia, and its cultural difficulty of expressing sensuality, something he tried to do with his Cambodian series. “Khmer Ferminitude” completed in 2007 does a masterful job of bringing out that sensuality that is so hard to express there. Later, in his Chinese themed series Chasing the Dragon, he refers to Chinese culture in an unassuming way that presents some celebrities through the prism of his unique gaze. In the series Chasing the Dragon, the work refers to Chinese icons but not all are celebrities. These exhibition pieces are not strictly a series but a group of paintings that fit together, my figures become real to me through the whole process and I start to feel like I know them in person”. When looking at his work, this sense of knowledge and depth about the subject really ads a complexity to the pieces that allow them to break apart from the Chinese artists who came before.
He stated that his new studio was allowing him to experiment with brush changes, and he now works in clothing resembling gym gear, better to allow his new active and larger paintings to evolve.
Words: Michael Earle
Creative Director, Think Design Magazine: Trisha Miller
Michael Earle Michael Earle Think Design Think Design Magazine Think Design Magazine Phuket Trisha Miller Trisha Miller Phuket Trisha Miller Think Design
Where: Zagreb,Croatia
Industry:
Where: Paris,France
Industry:
Where: Paris,France
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