Lucianna Whittle - Guest Collection
We are proud to present two initial exclusive original pieces from Lucianna Whittle for her Guest residency with GG.
Based in Hove’s Studio 106, Lucianna Whittle creates immersive, abstract oil paintings that invite viewers into a direct experience of art. Her background in Fine Art and Cultural Theory informs her exploration of aesthetic consciousness and the sublime, with a focus on fostering meaningful encounters within the gallery setting.
Lucianna’s work evokes a “felt experience,” encouraging viewers to move beyond analysis and engage in a shared moment of presence. Her flowing brushwork promotes openness and curiosity, offering art as a space of unmediated strength, completed through the viewer’s gaze.
Both originals are now available for viewing and purchase in the gallery and online via Lucianna's store below.
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I am a process-driven painter, endlessly curious about what image-making can reveal about life as matter. I use the painting state to be in relationship with the object of creation itself. I only want to know what art can gift us once the artist has left the building and any notion of 'saying something' has been left at the door. Why is it, that paint applied in total freedom will reconcile into a painting? I believe the work of an artist is to mature their relationship with art, through the act of making. Nothing more. Art belongs to a context distinct from all other pursuits in that it transcends the person doing it. Or at least it should. The further I have moved away from illustrating, elucidating, describing, or consciously generating aesthetic value, the greater the content of my work. It's a curious paradox, both timeless and infinite. Through painting, I have come to believe the following, and these are the tenets that underpin my work:
Painting is a collaboration between truth and form that reveals itself to the artist like a secret, whispered.
Painting translates experience into a two-dimensional plane unbound by words but somehow more real, for its residual freedom.
Painting feels like remembering something that hasn't happened yet, an uncanny sense of yes.
Painting occupies a fleeting state, referencing the ancient while riding the flux.
Painting is a state in which I can bathe in my aesthetic consciousness, playful and timeless.