Details:
① Artwork:
Flower for Yayoi Kusama
This detailed painting depicts a flower with gestural and segmented petals that veer between abstraction and representation. The work features visual cues drawn from the work of the artist Yayoi Kusama.
Max Jansons’s complex and multi-layered compositions explore the tradition of still-life painting. Deceptively ornamental, the artist imbues his works with archival techniques and references. Janson uses classical materials—linen primed with lead, paints ground in aged oils and pigments whose sources are now extinct—to achieve contemporary results. The surface of the artist's compositions are fluid, vibrant and active, and clearly feature evidence of the artist's hand and the stroke of the paintbrush. Jansons' paintings are meticulous, elemental and carefully devised environments that reveal themselves over and over again.
Specs:
③ Artist:
Max Jansons’ complex and multi-layered paintings explore the tradition of still-life painting. The artist’s meticulous works are made with archival techniques and references, including linen primed with lead, paints ground in aged oils and pigments whose sources are now extinct. Focusing on both intimacy and quaintness, Jansons creates deceptively ornamental compositions whose surfaces are fluid, vibrant and active.
BIO:
Max Jansons was born in New York City in 1974. The artist received a BFA from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1996, and an MFA from Columbia University in New York City in 1998.
Exhibitions of Jansons’ work have taken place at: Harper’s Gallery in East Hampton, New York; Nassima Landau in Tel Aviv, Israel; Karma in New York City; Galerie Lefebvre et Fils in Paris, France; Berkshire Botanical Garden in Stockbridge, Massachusetts; Charlie James Gallery in Los Angeles, California; and Louise Alexander Gallery in Porto Cervo, Italy; among others.
Jansons received Columbia University’s DRA Fellowship.
Jansons’ work has been reviewed by: The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Art of Choice, Los Angeles Times, Gallery Magazine and The Hollywood Reporter, among others.