Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Kelly Vivanco Exhibits New Fairytale-inspired Works in “Tendrils”

Kelly Vivanco, previously featured here on our blog, counts a wide variety of artistic styles among her influences, ranging from Disney movies to Dutch master painters and artists from the Golden Age of illustration. Her study of classical fine art has contributed to her depiction of cartoony, boldly outlined characters in the rich colors that she chooses.

Kelly Vivanco, previously featured here on our blog, counts a wide variety of artistic styles among her influences, ranging from Disney movies to Dutch master painters and artists from the Golden Age of illustration. Her study of classical fine art has contributed to her depiction of cartoony, boldly outlined characters in the rich colors that she chooses.

Primarily working in acrylic and oils out of her Escondido, California based studio, Vivanco seeks to evoke the books of her childhood in her paintings. In an interview with Hi-Fructose, she said, “I enjoyed looking through my richly illustrated books, getting absorbed in the worlds. Sometimes I look through a book I haven’t seen since I was little and I have this sense of recognition – like, “Oh my god! I was there!” Like I had actually been in the picture.”

One such book is Hans Christian Andersen’s classic Thumbelina, the story of a tiny girl and her adventures with appearance- and marriage-minded toads, moles, and cockroaches. Vivanco retells the tale in her current solo show, “Tendrils” at Distinction Gallery in California. It’s a story that has been adapted by countless artists over the years, and Vivanco applies her curious and playful characters to the story’s darker themes of rejection, death, loss, and suffering. In one image, the weather starts turning cold and facing certain death, Thumbelina finds the home of an old field-mouse and begs for food.

About the darkness in her work, Vivanco admits that it’s a mystery even to her. “I would like to think that the subjects of my paintings, human or animal, are able to convey hints and glimpses of some larger story that the viewer can connect to,” she says, “it is never my intention to present a preloaded and limited interpretation of my paintings, but to leave it open and release a thousand furling tendrils of stories and connections.”

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
In the personal work of illustrator Andrew Fairclough, the artist’s cerebral explorations are infused with comic and pop influences. Stylistically, his work has a kinship with the drawings of Charles Burns or other Lowbrow luminaries, while also showing Fairclough’s love of vintage spot illustrations, retro science fiction, and "the textural wonders of degraded print."
Jakub Rozalski (aka "Mr. Werewolf") is a Polish concept artist and illustrator who describes the world in his paintings as a futuristic 1920s Eastern Europe, or "1920+". Previously featured on our blog, Rozalski's works contrast the soft nostalgia of 19th and 20th century inspired scenery under attack against giant mecha robots. While warring nations combat mechanical beasts in epic battles that feel alien and also vaguely familiar, Polish shepards and farmers in the countryside work their land alongside wild animals. "I like to mix historical facts and situations with my own motives, ideas and visions," he says, "I attach great importance to the details, the equipment, the costumes, because it allows you to embed painting within a specified period of time.”
Minnesota based artist Alex Kuno best describes his work's narratives as apocalyptic, satiric fairytales. His mixed media illustrations are as dark as they are whimsical, following deranged subjects, often children, rendered in acrylics, graphite, chalk, ink, ballpoint pens and crayons on pine boards. His early series, after which he named his website, calls this world the "The Miscreants of Tiny Town", inhabited by lost orphans looking for a home in an endless, foreboding landscape that has as much personality as its characters. Though nightmarish, there's also a sense of romance in his young subjects' undying desire to eke out a better existence for themselves. A story about romance is at the heart of Kuno's latest series debuting on Valentine's Day at Dorothy Circus Gallery in Rome.
New Delhi-based illustrator Archan Nair creates fluorescent digital art with a painterly effect. Nair composes kaleidoscopic images that resemble Rorschach ink blots. Wisps of color tumble like clouds of pigment in water, creating nebulous shapes that morph into one another. His work has a psychedelic quality evocative of the spiritually-focused visionary art movement, which borrows heavily from Hindu iconography in particular. While human subjects are at the center of Nair's work, he melts figurative elements into textured, abstract designs and otherworldly visuals.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List