Joana Galego, Sisters and Mothers, 2020 (framed)
Mixed media and collage on paper, 30.5 x 30cm
Portugese-born artist Joana Galego’s images are informed by – in her words – ‘memories and feelings rather than actual events’. Firmly rooted in drawing, her paintings and works on paper are characterised by a vibrant palette and a visual language partly inspired by historical artists including Piero de la Francesca and Paul Gaugin.
Joana uses layering and changes of perspective to create multiple narratives within her compositions, which range from intimate to grand in scale. Figures – both adult and childlike – are seen hiding, embracing, resting and playing together in a range of dreamlike scenarios. However, a sense of stillness prevails, despite the activities of the artist’s subjects.
This framed work combines mixed media and collage resulting in a patchwork effect of different textures and surface details. As in many of Joana’s compositions, there are several narratives and interactions between figures of differing sizes (and probably ages) at play. A focal point of the image is the artist’s vibrant lemon tree. Joana uses heightened colour such as the lemons’ luminescent yellow to convey, in her words, ‘the saturation of feelings those times seemed to carry… and reflections on what it means to be a daughter, a child amongst the adults, a girl, a woman.’
Joana graduated from the University of Lisbon in 2016 and subsequently moved to London to attend the Royal Drawing School between 2016 and 2017. Her work has been exhibited in numerous group shows in London and Portugal including the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize for which she was shortlisted in 2019. Solo exhibitions include ‘Spring and All’ at the Royal Drawing School, London, in 2019, and ‘o lugar indeciso’, Museu das Artes de Sintra, Portugal, 2016. Joana has been awarded prizes including The Sir Denis Mahon Award from the Royal Drawing School (2017). She has undertaken artistic residencies in the USA and Portugal and her work is held in numerous private collections. She currently lives and works in south east London.
Mixed media and collage on paper, 30.5 x 30cm
Portugese-born artist Joana Galego’s images are informed by – in her words – ‘memories and feelings rather than actual events’. Firmly rooted in drawing, her paintings and works on paper are characterised by a vibrant palette and a visual language partly inspired by historical artists including Piero de la Francesca and Paul Gaugin.
Joana uses layering and changes of perspective to create multiple narratives within her compositions, which range from intimate to grand in scale. Figures – both adult and childlike – are seen hiding, embracing, resting and playing together in a range of dreamlike scenarios. However, a sense of stillness prevails, despite the activities of the artist’s subjects.
This framed work combines mixed media and collage resulting in a patchwork effect of different textures and surface details. As in many of Joana’s compositions, there are several narratives and interactions between figures of differing sizes (and probably ages) at play. A focal point of the image is the artist’s vibrant lemon tree. Joana uses heightened colour such as the lemons’ luminescent yellow to convey, in her words, ‘the saturation of feelings those times seemed to carry… and reflections on what it means to be a daughter, a child amongst the adults, a girl, a woman.’
Joana graduated from the University of Lisbon in 2016 and subsequently moved to London to attend the Royal Drawing School between 2016 and 2017. Her work has been exhibited in numerous group shows in London and Portugal including the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize for which she was shortlisted in 2019. Solo exhibitions include ‘Spring and All’ at the Royal Drawing School, London, in 2019, and ‘o lugar indeciso’, Museu das Artes de Sintra, Portugal, 2016. Joana has been awarded prizes including The Sir Denis Mahon Award from the Royal Drawing School (2017). She has undertaken artistic residencies in the USA and Portugal and her work is held in numerous private collections. She currently lives and works in south east London.
Mixed media and collage on paper, 30.5 x 30cm
Portugese-born artist Joana Galego’s images are informed by – in her words – ‘memories and feelings rather than actual events’. Firmly rooted in drawing, her paintings and works on paper are characterised by a vibrant palette and a visual language partly inspired by historical artists including Piero de la Francesca and Paul Gaugin.
Joana uses layering and changes of perspective to create multiple narratives within her compositions, which range from intimate to grand in scale. Figures – both adult and childlike – are seen hiding, embracing, resting and playing together in a range of dreamlike scenarios. However, a sense of stillness prevails, despite the activities of the artist’s subjects.
This framed work combines mixed media and collage resulting in a patchwork effect of different textures and surface details. As in many of Joana’s compositions, there are several narratives and interactions between figures of differing sizes (and probably ages) at play. A focal point of the image is the artist’s vibrant lemon tree. Joana uses heightened colour such as the lemons’ luminescent yellow to convey, in her words, ‘the saturation of feelings those times seemed to carry… and reflections on what it means to be a daughter, a child amongst the adults, a girl, a woman.’
Joana graduated from the University of Lisbon in 2016 and subsequently moved to London to attend the Royal Drawing School between 2016 and 2017. Her work has been exhibited in numerous group shows in London and Portugal including the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize for which she was shortlisted in 2019. Solo exhibitions include ‘Spring and All’ at the Royal Drawing School, London, in 2019, and ‘o lugar indeciso’, Museu das Artes de Sintra, Portugal, 2016. Joana has been awarded prizes including The Sir Denis Mahon Award from the Royal Drawing School (2017). She has undertaken artistic residencies in the USA and Portugal and her work is held in numerous private collections. She currently lives and works in south east London.