Marisa Purcell: Endlessness

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on pinterest

Deadline:

Edwina Corlette Gallery

These paintings insist on communicating with you. It’s hard to escape the colour that reflects on and around these works. Without explanation, colour beckons you to feel and connect, rekindling our awareness of the most essential aspects of our being which is the very essence of communication.

‘Endlessness’ sees a shift in my work. The familiar veils are there but the patterns that threatened to interrupt and pierce them have been removed, leaving us with only the bare affect of colour.

It is the pure potential this bareness unveils that can be endlessly experienced.

Marisa Purcell, 2021

For Marisa Purcell, paint acts as a medium between the empirical world of knowing and a release into the unknown. As she works, her method stretches paint’s physical qualities by combining thinly veiled layers of colour, allowing paint to pool and dry slowly. Through this she builds strange relationships of shape and scale while marking graphic rhythms at varying speeds and densities, risking awkward crises that stand as metaphors for everyday life.

Purcell employs her depth of experience with oil, acrylic, watercolour, and drawing media to conjure an internal landscape at symbiotic play with notions of micro and macro cosmologies. She says, “the most beautiful thing occurs when discord is integral to the resolution of a painting: there must be something at stake, or you haven’t pushed your own sense of what you’re capable of doing”.

Marisa holds a Master of Visual Arts from the Sydney College of Art, University of Sydney and a Master of Art Administration from University of New South Wales, College of Fine Art. Her work is exhibited nationally and internationally and she has received numerous awards including as a finalist in the 2014 Blake Prize, a Highly Commended in the Waverley Art Prize (2013) and a Post-Graduate Award, University of Sydney (2006/2007). Carol Schwarzman

More Information 

Image: Close And Far’ 2021 acrylic on linen 183 x 168 cm

Info not available

Info not available

Related Posts

Artist Talk: Melissa Stannard

Artist Talk: Melissa Stannard

20250510
A Narrow Strip Along a Steep Edge

A Narrow Strip Along a Steep Edge

20250510
20250518
Horizon 2025

Horizon 2025

20250502
20250511
Artist Talk: Patricia Piccinini

Artist Talk: Patricia Piccinini

20250503
Transfer

Transfer

20250516
20250803
Charlie Donalson: Cubomancy

Charlie Donalson: Cubomancy

20250503
20250713
Lethbridge Landscape Prize 2025

Lethbridge Landscape Prize 2025

20250509
20250525
Margaret Olley

Margaret Olley

20250429
20250524
Jonathan McBurnie: Omnishambles

Jonathan McBurnie: Omnishambles

20250503
20250713