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Abstract way | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Sophie DUMONT. Item composed of canvas in minimalism or contemporary style
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Abstract way | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Sophie DUMONT. Item composed of canvas in minimalism or contemporary style
Abstract way | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Sophie DUMONT. Item composed of canvas in minimalism or contemporary style
Abstract way | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Sophie DUMONT. Item composed of canvas in minimalism or contemporary style
Abstract way | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Sophie DUMONT. Item composed of canvas in minimalism or contemporary style
Abstract way | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Sophie DUMONT. Item composed of canvas in minimalism or contemporary style
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Abstract way | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Sophie DUMONT. Item composed of canvas in minimalism or contemporary style

Created and Sold by Sophie DUMONT

Sophie DUMONT

Abstract way - Paintings

Price from $2,547 to $2,590

In Stock Now

Shipping: DHL 5-8 days
Price $130 Shipping in the US, ask the creator about international shipping.
Estimated Arrival: January 1, 2025

Handmade

Woman Owned

Made To Order

Locally Sourced

DimensionsWeight
18.11H x 21.65W x 0.79D in
46H x 55W x 2D cm

Oil and knife abstract landscape in ochre, red and green tones
The palette, often in muted tones, suggests more than it imposes a similar construction. The green tones are counterbalanced by the red which warms the canvas.
The multiplication of layers brings a generous material, rich in underlying hues to warm up these greens and grays.
The artist always chooses to warm up the cold colors with red ochres in the lower layers.
Sophie Dumont is inspired by countryside landscapes around her home. She keeps what seems essential to her until she obtains an abstract composition.
Choose your black or natural wood frame.
Size of the framed work 50 x 59 cm
The edges of the painting are painted and a hanging system is placed at the back.

Item Abstract way
Created by Sophie DUMONT
As seen in Creator's Studio, Langrune-sur-Mer, France
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Sophie DUMONT
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2023
Sublimate, appropriate the subject, keep only the essential.

Born in Paris on April 09, 1964. Lives and works in Langrune sur Mer (Normandy)

Sophie Dumont moved away from the Metropolis to live a few years in the Antilles, Spain and finally in Morocco.

She stores up a host of images and colors that she will carefully keep at the bottom of her memory.

On her return to France in 1991, she took the plunge and grabbed the brushes. From her earliest childhood, she was immersed in the world of painting, through the drawings of Henriette Dumont, her paternal grandmother who sketches at all times, children and grandchildren with a line that can recall that of Matisse .

Sophie Dumont is interested in the history of art, works for several years, searches, discovers in order to fully realize herself around 2007.

Its invoice becomes stronger, the layers multiply on the canvas, revealing a beach or cliffs to whoever wants to discover them.

His work in oil takes on its full value in successive layers and transparencies in shades of gray and white.

Sophie DUMONT extends her exploration of the Norman universe.

The environment is familiar to her, but she stubbornly welds the slightest vibrations.

The omnipresent landscape hides from view to reveal furtive appearances that drown in the pearly and translucent light.

The subliminal vision of a horizon cut out by distant cliffs evokes a daily life punctuated by a constantly changing space.

Nothing disturbs the tranquility of a space shaped by these diaphanous lights, a mixture of grays and shadows that subtly play with the fluidities of air and water. These landscapes imbued with a lyricism bordering on abstraction seem to move away from a reality that the heaviness of traditional painting wants to find in the recognizable.

The representation is irreversibly detached from the motif to better reflect the emotion aroused by the total immersion in the painting. The image fades before the senses, giving the viewer his freedom of interpretation.

The addition in certain paintings of materials such as gauze reveals at the same time the permanent quest for new efforts.

The hierarchy established in the canvas by different centers of interest reinforces the confrontation between matter and source of light. The lines of force are sometimes shifted

for the benefit of a greater convergence towards the heart of the representation which remains abstract,



But technical developments in no way affect the artist's predilection for large formats,

nor its expression in a free choice of subjects, such as those which, for the first time, will mark

a semblance of a break (very limited) with what remains a constant. A conspicuous distance from the painting of motifs.



CRITICAL

Sophie DUMONT's abstract is not a concept, it is an approach where each canvas is built

around graphics put into perspective by color.

The drawing can recall the shape of a body or the meanders of a landscape. It is only the unpremeditated interpretation of a figurative idea, which takes other forms in space.

The canvas is structured around a play of curves and lines filtering the lights.

It is in this refined construction that the palette of often contrasting tones enters the scene.

But the substance is never raw, drawing from its maturation lyrical effects which are the result of a fruitful work of the material. The knife shapes the material in successive layers that merge into a combination of shimmering colors.

The underlying presence of the different substrates creates this vibration born from the contrast between matter and color, to give the representation a life of its own, independent of any reference. The spectator's gaze, far from being guided, is invited to travel freely in the canvas.

His perception is only the expression of his own emotions, submitted simply to the effect of modulations transcribed by the artist. Hence this permanent relationship between works with sometimes changing appearances and spirit, but which symbolize a coherent and sincere approach.

Francois Laune

Art critic