ARTIST PROFILE

Ádám Dóra

  • Hungary (b. 1993 in Vác)
  • Currently in Budapest, Hungary.
Fluo Rock

Fluo Rock

  • 2021
  • Oil, Acrylic on Canvas
  • 20 x 30 cm

  • 'Hownow' pop-up shooting at Sopron street, Budapest Curated by Laura Farkas // Simor & Krivocenko Art Management

  • Dsc07403
  • D c3 b3ra 20 c3 81d c3 a1m fluo 20rock 2021 acrylic 20  20oil 20on 20canvas 30x20 20cm
  • Rotated Trip - thumbnail Saw Soles - thumbnail Offroad - thumbnail Monster Truck Sneakers - thumbnail Rotated Step - thumbnail Alone on the top - thumbnail On the Rocks - thumbnail New step - thumbnail In Cover - thumbnail Cloudy - thumbnail Fluo Rock - thumbnail Air - thumbnail '2m' - thumbnail Soft rock - thumbnail Bulldozer - thumbnail Rotated Step - thumbnail Vulcanized - thumbnail Little walk I. - thumbnail

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    Chunky Steps | 2020 - 2021

The project Chunky Steps mainly comprises of oil on canvas pieces, developed as a series of interlacing works. The idea of my series was developed during the lockdown caused by the global pandemic. I discovered new motifs that were influenced by products of the fashion industry. It is clear that the fashion sector reacts to the social alienations of the postmodern world by trying to compensate the void with an always changing illusion of the present, which reinterprets the past and the future constantly. This power of the ‘present’ that set the actual trend of the season is condensed in the pieces. In fashion, in the last couple of years, the tendency has been to mix timeless classic colors and patterns with futuristic oversized and experimental shapes. Using elements of different eras the fashion industry blurs the boundaries and creates an uncertain direction where we are overwhelmed in the superficial freedom of choice. In my paintings I place iconic sneakers designs of our time in lyrical landscapes settings. These plastic items, coming from the production line are excluding the artisanal knowledge and the craftsmanship we once prized and identified with design. The made to measure clothing has been restructured since the industrial revolution, with the emergence of ready-to-wear clothing, and continue to evolve and reinterpret itself on an ongoing basis. The increasing value of comfort and usefulness evoked a new kind of aesthetic, which lies in the ugly, the trash, the fetish of disproportion, hence logos and brands’ messages has seen a growth in size like never before. We have set a new world order based on these products that we cherish and love as if they were living beings and had souls. The series examines the phenomenon itself and the connection between its contrasts within the visual language of gestural painting.