Sebastian Powley

A landscape is never a faithful image. The vistas portrayed in paintings have no counterpart in reality — they are constructions put together by the skill of the artist, artificial creations that while referring to a certain place, nonetheless invent new scenarios out of the elements available. Hills and mountains move under the direction of a brush giving definition to the line of the horizon; clouds are arrested in the sky as the light takes on a golden hue; entire fields are displaced and new flowers and trees are planted; rivers are reversed; coastlines reimagined. Landscapes are like windows onto unknown lands, discovered in the course of their making. Like still-lifes, landscapes are composed of objects whose sole purpose is to form a compelling appearance. Uncommon colors and textures, familiar but strange seeming things, a disorienting sense of scale and perspective — these are the features uniting landscapes and still-lifes, which exist as pleasure domes for the eye. These paintings by Sebastian Powley exist to be looked at: they present themselves subtly but persist in the mind, appearing like a flash when your eyes flutter shut.

- Patrick Zapien


(from top to bottom, left to right)

In the Clouds, Oil on burlap, 18 x 10 in., 2020.

Gauguin Colors, Oil on burlap, 18 x 10 in., 2020.

Scraped & Peeled, Windekind Farm, Oil on canvas, 18 x 12 in., 2020.

Sky-wall, Oil on board, 20 x 11 in., 2020.

Black Bananas, Oil on linen, 16 x 10.5 in., 2019.

Fish in Plastic, Oil on burlap, 17 x 10.5 in., 2019.

Still Life with Metal Bowl, Oil on board, 36 x 24 in., 2017.

Still Life with Matches, Oil on board, 27 x 12 in., 2018.

Sebastian Powley earned his BFA at The University of the Arts in 2018. For his thesis he created a series of still life oil paintings from the observation of cups, bottles, jewelry, and skulls. Since then he has curated shows independently and participated in group shows in Philadelphia. Sebastian is currently employed as a carpenter and lives in Philadelphia.

You can see more of Sebastian’s work on his website and Instagram.

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