Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Studio Visit: Christian Rex van Minnen Breaks Down His Layered Oil Painting Process

Christian Rex van Minnen's paintings (featured in HF Vol. 25) are painstakingly laborious. The artist uses the techniques of the Northern Renaissance masters to paint tripped-out portraits and still lifes where his subjects devolve into bulbous, tumor-like lumps of flesh and organic matter. While Van Minnen's work is commonly interpreted as being about deformity, when we visited the artist's studio in Brooklyn a few weeks ago, he discussed the conceptual underpinnings of his creative process. Take a look at our photos from Van Minnen's studio after the jump.

Christian Rex van Minnen’s paintings (featured in HF Vol. 25) are painstakingly laborious. The artist uses the techniques of the Northern Renaissance masters to paint tripped-out portraits and still lifes where his subjects devolve into bulbous, tumor-like lumps of flesh and organic matter.

While Van Minnen’s work is commonly interpreted as being about deformity, when we visited the artist’s studio in Brooklyn a few weeks ago, he discussed the conceptual underpinnings of his creative process. Of Dutch heritage himself, Van Minnen pointed out the connections between the works of the Northern Renaissance masters and the colonial politics of the era. The grotesque elements of his work, rendered in this timeworn style, signal at the insidious effects of European colonialism and the death, destruction, and racism that it engendered.

Work in progress

Van Minnen skillfully paints off-putting details in visually alluring ways. He has developed a unique technique for rendering tactile-looking, sumptuous textures. For his latest work, Still Life with Diary Entry and Diabetes, the artist began by creating a monochromatic underpainting while leaving the white of the canvas exposed for certain figures. As he built up layers of oil pigment to create 3D-looking shapes, he achieved a neon glow that made certain, gummy candy-like shapes appear to pop off the canvas. One of his most ambitious paintings to date, “Still Life wtih Diary Entry and Diabetes,” will debut at Gallery Poulsen’s upcoming group show, “Blaze of Glory,” opening on June 13. Take a look at our photos from Van Minnen’s studio to get some insight into his process.

Work in progress

Left to right: Underpainting, Work in progress

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Berlin-based American artist James Bullough splinters and fractures hyper-realistic paintings of women to open spaces through which complex and unfinished stories are revealed. The vibrancy of skin tone and naturalistic musculature in Bullough's technique were learned through an intensive study of Old Master paintings. Bullough's interest in Old Masters is also evident in the way in which several of his nude subjects stare at the viewer, while taking care to keep their faces at least partially concealed.
Photographer Karen Jerzyk creates surreal works that use often overlooked spaces and themes of both horror and the fantastic. Despite what seems like a complex narrative in each piece, the artist insists that each photo is open to interpretation. She simply aims to invoke “thought and emotion.”
Whether Dutch still-life, late Romantic oceans, or the work of Delacroix, Matthew Hansel's recent major oil paintings bring the artist's distorting lens to different parts of art history. The latter paintings, in particular, show a disappearing, exposing the raw linen at the top of each work. He's currently showing these paintings at The Hole NYC in "Giving Up the Ghost." The show runs through July 7.

Reza Bahmani's oil paintings, with each's distinctive texture and scale, carry a distinct intimacy. In his recent show at Saless Gallery an accompanying score that required the use of headphones further beckoned viewers to focus on the massive portraits.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List