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Daguerreotypes

In this collection of abstracts I explore the use of the subtle monochrome and bronze sepia tones that were a result of the first commercially successful photographic process, referred to as Daguerreotype. 
  Many at the time predicted that the birth of photography heralded the end of painting, but quite to the contrary, subsequent history has proved it to be anything but the case. For the ultimate goal of painting - or indeed any art - has rarely been a quest to simply capture reality in its most 'photo-real' sense. More so to tell stories with depictions of reality using varying degrees of accuracy, abstraction and surreality, an entirely different concept altogether
Daguerreotypes

In this collection of abstracts I explore the use of the subtle monochrome and bronze sepia tones that were a result of the first commercially successful photographic process, referred to as Daguerreotype. 
  Many at the time predicted that the birth of photography heralded the end of painting, but quite to the contrary, subsequent history has proved it to be anything but the case. For the ultimate goal of painting - or indeed any art - has rarely been a quest to simply capture reality in its most 'photo-real' sense. More so to tell stories with depictions of reality using varying degrees of accuracy, abstraction and surreality, an entirely different concept altogether
Daguerreotypes

In this collection of abstracts I explore the use of the subtle monochrome and bronze sepia tones that were a result of the first commercially successful photographic process, referred to as Daguerreotype. 
  Many at the time predicted that the birth of photography heralded the end of painting, but quite to the contrary, subsequent history has proved it to be anything but the case. For the ultimate goal of painting - or indeed any art - has rarely been a quest to simply capture reality in its most 'photo-real' sense. More so to tell stories with depictions of reality using varying degrees of accuracy, abstraction and surreality, an entirely different concept altogether
Daguerreotypes

In this collection of abstracts I explore the use of the subtle monochrome and bronze sepia tones that were a result of the first commercially successful photographic process, referred to as Daguerreotype. 
  Many at the time predicted that the birth of photography heralded the end of painting, but quite to the contrary, subsequent history has proved it to be anything but the case. For the ultimate goal of painting - or indeed any art - has rarely been a quest to simply capture reality in its most 'photo-real' sense. More so to tell stories with depictions of reality using varying degrees of accuracy, abstraction and surreality, an entirely different concept altogether
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Daguerreotype #1 Painting

James Charles Hester

United Kingdom

Painting, Acrylic on Canvas

Size: 36 W x 48 H x 1.4 D in

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About The Artwork

Daguerreotypes In this collection of abstracts I explore the use of the subtle monochrome and bronze sepia tones that were a result of the first commercially successful photographic process, referred to as Daguerreotype. Many at the time predicted that the birth of photography heralded the end of painting, but quite to the contrary, subsequent history has proved it to be anything but the case. For the ultimate goal of painting - or indeed any art - has rarely been a quest to simply capture reality in its most 'photo-real' sense. More so to tell stories with depictions of reality using varying degrees of accuracy, abstraction and surreality, an entirely different concept altogether

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:36 W x 48 H x 1.4 D in

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Born in a remote village a short walk up the hill from artist Sir Stanley Spencer’s beloved Cookham, England, modern-day painter James Charles Hester also shares a reverence for that particular stretch of the River Thames. Citing it to have taught him everything he knows about light, shade, and texture. The only difference being that, unlike Spencer, his decision to follow the river out to its inevitable meeting with the sea and the greater world beyond was entirely of his own choosing. As such, it is no surprise that a great many of Hester’s paintings are scenes featuring water, albeit in varying degrees of abstraction. For it is within the abstract interpretations of nature that we can see the artist is firmly in his element. “I am constantly chasing an idea of variety within my work and it is my great hope that although I employ different levels of realism and abstraction, one could easily tell each piece was born of the same mind.” Presently sharing equal parts of the year between Malta and England, the artist is focusing his attention on capturing the almost limitless sights around Valletta, Mdina, and the Three Cities. Of which he says, “I could live a thousand lifetimes and still not have painted every view of this profoundly beautiful place. The river might have taught me light and shade, but it is the sea in relation to these shores that has taught me to look even closer at the complexity of colours and the harmony of a composition.”

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