Interview with Dora Fraissinet: Inspiration and Alchemy

Dent Blanche, 2020

Dent Blanche, 2020

EN | FR

Galerie Alpine: Looking at your paintings, it’s clear to see that you adore the Alpine mountains. How often do you visit the Alps?

Dora Fraissinet: I actually live all year long in the French Alps in the resort of Serre Chevalier, Hautes-Alpes. I benefit from an inexhaustible source of inspiration everyday. I also spent my childhood in Switzerland, so I was in contact with the light of the mountains from a very young age. Coming to exhibit in Switzerland is kind of a return to my roots.

Galerie Alpine: What is your favorite mountain to paint?

The mountain I paint most frequently is the Meije. It is a mythical summit for the mountaineers—the last summit conquered in the Alps located in the High Alps. It is particularly majestic, from every angle. I had the chance to traverse its ridges, just 30 years ago now. That ascent left a very strong impression on me and is always very present in my inspiration for painting.

Journée croquis à la Cime des Conchiers

Journée croquis à la Cime des Conchiers

Journée croquis à la Cime des Conchiers (2).jpg

La Cime des Conchiers

Galerie Alpine: Do you consider yourself a plein air painter?

No, I am not an artist who paints outdoors. I prefer, during my outings in the mountains, to give all my time to contemplative walking. I soak up the landscapes, the atmosphere, the elements. I memorize, I internalize, I take pictures, I can sometimes also make some sketches. Afterwards, I like to work in the calm of my studio.

Galerie Alpine: Your paintings are dreamlike and atmospheric. There is a wonderful play between crisp contrast and delicate gradients. Do you achieve this through memory, work from photos, or are they purely artistic inventions?

Dora Fraissinet: I could answer ‘yes’ to all three questions! I spend a lot of time up in the mountains, and I continue to hike regularly. Walking is conducive to meditation and allows me to internalize the landscapes. Then, in my studio, I use brushes, water, and pigments to bring the emotions felt back to life on paper. I also work with photos and sketches made on the spot. And sometimes, I let my imagination speak.

Galerie Alpine: There is so much detail and subtlety in your working. It’s absolutely masterful. Has ink and watercolour always been your preferred medium since your studies in art school in Lyon? 

Dora Fraissinet: Yes, ink and watercolor are my media of choice! I like to work with water which brings aspects of chance into the creative process. It brings more life, movement, and transparency. It is an alchemy. Water, pigments, brush, and paper combine in pursuit of the profound nature of the natural elements.

What I am particularly fond of with watercolor and ink techniques is working with water. I speak of alchemy, because water drives the transformations that give life to the work. Depending on the type of paper which is more or less absorbent and usage of ink or watercolor pigment, the reaction in contact with water is very different. I like to see the ink, or watercolor, fuse as soon as it comes into contact with water. I guide it with the brush but I don't control everything! There is an element of chance or surprise, good or bad!

Panorama sur le massif du Mélézin depuis Saint Chaffrey, Diptyque à l'aquarelle, 2021

Panorama sur le massif du Mélézin depuis Saint Chaffrey, Diptyque à l'aquarelle, 2021

Panorama sur le Massif du Mélézin travail en cours

Panorama sur le Massif du Mélézin travail en cours

Panorama sur la Meije et le Rateau depuis le plateau d'Emparis.JPG

Panorama sur la Meije et le Rateau depuis le plateau d'Emparis

Galerie Alpine: You manage to create very epic paintings even with a subdued colour palette. They are reminiscent of traditional Chinese ink paintings. Are Eastern styles an influence? What styles and artists have influenced you?

Dora Fraissinet: Yes, Chinese painting in the Tchan style (or Sumi-e in Japan) influenced me a lot throughout my artistic evolution. I particularly appreciate the pursuit of purity. One takes all the effort of the gesture and of the breath in attempting to get towards the essence, towards the pleasure of life, and the play between empty and full. This is truly the way in which I want to work. It is very demanding but fascinating.

Galerie Alpine: How did you study the techniques?

I discovered sumi-e painting thanks to a painter, Estelle Grisot, who teaches in Briançon. She was trained in these techniques by a master of Chinese painting in France, Robert Faure, and then did training in China with Li Xiang Hong and in Japan with Takayuki Shinohara. She transmitted her passion to me! But I am still a total novice in these techniques, I still have a long way to go! 

Galerie Alpine: You paint other types of landscapes like lakes, oceans, and forests. You have also painted animals. Is your process different for each subject?

No, the process is the same for all my work currently. But the watercolors I did on mountain fauna are several years old. I was working in a more diligent and meticulous way back then. I have evolved, and I hope to continue that evolution!

Galerie Alpine: Your paintings are not framed and presented behind glass. Could you tell us how you mount your work and why you choose to do it this way?

Dora Fraissinet: I like to work in larger and larger formats. It allows my work to be more impactful. The gesture is freer. I present my watercolors and large format Indian ink works, stretched on a frame and varnished. This frees me from glass, which is heavy and fragile. I use an invisible, matt varnish, as opposed to glass because it doesn’t create a barrier between the viewer and the work. 

Galerie Alpine: What are you currently working on? What developments do you have planned for future work?

Dora Fraissinet: I really want to work on larger and larger formats. I recently made a triptych of 70x210 cm and a diptych of 70x200 cm. I really like working this way, and I think I will continue to do so! Currently, I am starting to work with two other artists on a project around the Meije: "The eighty faces of the Meije", it harkens back to the eighty faces of Sainte-Victoire painted by Paul Cézanne. This project is in its infancy and will certainly require time, energy and enthusiasm.


EN | FR

Interview avec Dora Fraissinet: l'Inspiration et l'Alchimie

Panorama sur le massif du Mélézin

Panorama sur le massif du Mélézin

Galerie Alpine: En regardant vos peintures, il est clair que vous adorez les montagnes alpines. A quelle fréquence visitez-vous les Alpes?

 Dora Fraissinet: En fait, je vis toute l'année dans les Hautes Alpes, à Serre-Chevalier, dans les Alpes françaises. Je profite donc tous les jours d'une source d'inspiration inépuisable. J'ai aussi passé mon enfance en Suisse, j'ai donc été au contact de la lumière des montagnes dès mon plus jeune âge. Venir exposer en Suisse est pour moi une sorte de retour aux sources.

Galerie Alpine: Quelle est la montagne que vous avez préférée peindre?

La montagne que je peins le plus fréquemment est la Meije. C'est un sommet mythique pour les alpinistes, le dernier sommet vaincu dans les Alpes situé dans les Hautes Alpes. Elle est particulièrement majestueuse, sous toutes ses faces. J'ai eu la chance de pouvoir faire la traversée de ses arêtes, il y a juste 30 ans maintenant. Cette ascension m'a laissé un souvenir très fort, toujours très présent dans mon inspiration pour peindre. 

Journée croquis à la Cime des Conchiers

Journée croquis à la Cime des Conchiers

Travail en cours Panorama sur le massif du Mélézin

Travail en cours Panorama sur le massif du Mélézin

Galerie Alpine: Vous considérez-vous comme un artiste qui peint en plein air?

Non je ne suis pas une artiste qui peint en plein air. Je préfère, lors de mes sorties en montagne, accorder tout mon temps à la marche contemplative. Je m'imprègne des paysages, des atmosphères, des éléments. Je mémorise, j'intériorise, je prends des photos, je peux quelques fois aussi faire quelques croquis. J'aime, ensuite, travailler dans le calme de mon atelier. 

Galerie Alpine: Il y a une qualité onirique et atmosphérique dans vos peintures. Elles montrent un merveilleux jeu entre un contraste net et des dégradés délicats. Y parvenez-vous par la mémoire? Travaillez-vous à partir de photos? S'agit-il d'une invention purement artistique?

Dora Fraissinet: Je pourrais répondre par ‘oui’ aux trois questions ! J'ai fait beaucoup de haute montagne et je continue à randonner régulièrement en montagne. La marche est propice à la méditation et me permet d'intérioriser les paysages. Ensuite, dans mon atelier, pinceau, eau, et pigments font revivre sur le papier les émotions ressenties. Je travaille aussi avec des photos et croquis faits sur place. Et quelques fois, je laisse mon imagination parler.

Galerie Alpine: Il y a tellement de détails et de subtilité dans votre travail. C'est absolument magistral. L'encre et l'aquarelle ont-elles toujours été votre médium de prédilection depuis vos études en école d'art à Lyon? 

Dora Fraissinet: Oui, encre et aquarelle sont mon medium de prédilection ! J'aime travailler avec l'eau qui apporte une part de hasard dans la réalisation. l'eau donne plus de vie, de mouvement et de transparence. C'est une alchimie, eau-pigments-pinceau-papier qui opère dans la recherche de la nature profonde des éléments.

Ce que j'affectionne particulièrement dans les techniques d'aquarelle et encre, c'est le travail avec l'eau. Je parle d'alchimie car l'eau opère des transformations qui donnent vie à l'œuvre. Selon le type de papier, plus ou moins absorbant, selon les pigments (encre ou aquarelle), la réaction au contact de l'eau est très différente. J'aime voir l'encre, ou l'aquarelle, fuser dès qu'elle entre en contact avec l'eau. Je la guide avec le pinceau mais je ne maîtrise pas tout ! Il y a une part de hasard, des surprises, bonnes ou mauvaises!

Panorama sur le massif du Mélézin en cours de réalisation

Panorama sur le massif du Mélézin en cours de réalisation

Face à la Meije

Face à la Meije

Galerie Alpine: Vous parvenez à créer des peintures très épiques même avec une palette de couleurs tamisée. Elles rappellent les peintures à l'encre traditionnelles chinoises. Les styles orientaux sont-ils une influence? Quels styles et artistes vous ont influencé? 

Dora Fraissinet: Oui la peinture chinoise de style Tchan (ou Sumi-e au Japon) m'accompagne beaucoup dans mon évolution artistique. J'apprécie particulièrement cette recherche de pureté, tout le travail du geste, du souffle pour tenter d'aller vers l'essence, vers le frémissement de la vie, et le jeu du vide et du plein. C'est vraiment le sens dans lequel j'ai envie de travailler. C'est très exigeant mais passionnant.

Galerie Alpine: Comment avez-vous étudié les techniques?

J'ai découvert la peinture sumi-e grâce à une artiste-peintre, Estelle Grisot, qui enseigne à Briançon. Elle a été formée à ces techniques par un maître de peinture chinoise en France, Robert Faure, puis a effectué des stages en Chine avec Li Xiang Hong et au Japon avec Takayuki Shinohara. Elle m'a transmis sa passion ! Mais je suis encore totalement novice pour ces techniques, il me reste un long chemin à parcourir! 

Galerie Alpine: Vous peignez d'autres types de paysages, comme les lacs, les océans et les forêts. Vous avez aussi peint des animaux. Votre processus est-il différent lorsque vous peignez ces sujets?

Non, le processus est le même pour tout mon travail actuellement, mais les aquarelles que j'ai réalisées sur la faune de montagne datent de plusieurs années. Je travaillais à l'époque d'une manière plus appliquée et méticuleuse. J'ai évolué depuis, et j'espère poursuivre cette évolution!

Galerie Alpine: Vos tableaux ne sont pas encadrés et présentés derrière une vitre. Pouvez-vous nous dire comment vous montez votre travail et pourquoi vous choisissez de le faire de cette façon?

Dora Fraissinet: J'aime travailler sur des formats de plus en plus grands qui apportent plus de force à mon travail. Le geste est ainsi plus libre. Pour m'affranchir du verre, lourd et fragile, je présente mes aquarelles ou encre de chine grands format, tendues sur un châssis et vernies. J'utilise un vernis mat, invisible qui ne crée pas de barrière entre le spectateur et l'œuvre contrairement au verre.

Galerie Alpine: Sur quoi travaillez-vous actuellement? Quelles évolutions avez-vous prévu pour les travaux futurs?

Dora Fraissinet: J'ai très envie de travailler sur des formats de plus en plus grands. J'ai dernièrement réalisé un triptyque de 70x210 cm et un diptyque de 70x200 cm. J'aime beaucoup travailler ainsi et pense poursuivre en ce sens! Actuellement, je commence à travailler avec deux autres artistes, sur un projet autour de la Meije: "Les quatre-vingts visages de la Meije", en rappel des quatre-vingts visages de Sainte-Victoire peints par Paul Cézanne. Ce projet en est à ses débuts et nous demandera certainement du temps, de l'énergie et de l'enthousiasme.

Vernissage: Alanna Rowntree

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Renewed Hope, 2021 acrylic on canvas 80 x 70 cm

Renewed Hope, 2021
acrylic on canvas
80 x 70 cm

17.09.21  |  17h - 19h

Galerie Alpine, 97 Avenue Centrale, 1884 Villars-sur-Ollon


Galerie Alpine’s Artpéro is back with our first vernissage of the season. See new work by Alanna Rowntree, and meet the artist to learn how she creates her art.

Masks must be worn indoors.


L'Artpéro de la Galerie Alpine est de retour avec notre premier vernissage de la saison. Découvrez les nouvelles œuvres d'Alanna Rowntree et rencontrez l'artiste pour apprendre comment elle crée son art.

Port du masque obligatoire à l’intérieur.

Interview with Vincenzo Romanelli: The Animal Kingdom’s Master Sculptor

Clay modelling is one of Vincenzo’s favorite parts of the sculpting process.

Clay modelling is one of Vincenzo’s favorite parts of the sculpting process.

Galerie Alpine: Bonjour, Vincenzo. Thanks for taking the time to do this interview. Have you been back to Italy?

Vincenzo Romanelli: I actually just arrived yesterday from the south of Italy, but I’m going back in September for some work.

Galerie Alpine: Was the south of Italy a holiday?

Vincenzo Romanelli: Yes, I was learning to kite surf.

Galerie Alpine: That takes quite a bit of strength and agility.

Vincenzo Romanelli: It’s quite technical. I’m still a beginner.

Galerie Alpine: I’m sure you handled it well, especially as you’re accustomed to the physically taxing and technical work required to create your sculptures. 

Vincenzo Romanelli: For large pieces, building the armature, lifting the clay, and moving the sculptures does require strength. It can be physical, but mainly, it is mentally challenging. It requires a lot of concentration. The clay modelling process itself is quite gentle, as I’m capturing fine details. Marble carving is more physically demanding. 

Vincenzo prefers  sculpting outdoors, which he does at his atelier in Gryon.

Vincenzo prefers sculpting outdoors, which he does at his atelier in Gryon.

Galerie Alpine: What do you find mentally challenging about sculpting?

Vincenzo Romanelli: It is the focus and concentration required to allow my mind to transmit what I see to my hands and recreate my vision. This connection is very important and necessary especially when the sculpture is at an advanced point. Very small, subtle details or shapes can make a big difference. Sometimes it’s hard to see. You have to train your eyes to spot the differences between the model and the sculpture.

Galerie Alpine: Are you hinting at the sight-size technique?

Vincenzo Romanelli: Partly, though training your eye to recreate what you see in proportion does relate to the sight-size technique. The sight-size technique helps you to replicate what your eye sees. It’s a method which is also used in drawing and painting. The subject and sculpture are situated side by side. From a certain distance, they both appear the same size, so you can easily compare the two as you work. It allows you to reproduce what you see with exact proportions. 

Galerie Alpine: You sculpt in a studio as well as outdoors. How do the two environments differ for you?
Vincenzo Romanelli: A studio is a closed environment. It’s very good for sculpting as you have optimum conditions—the right light, temperature, tools, and water, but it’s not always possible to sculpt in a studio. I enjoy sculpting outside, from life when possible, especially for commissions. In their natural environment animals are more engaging and show their personality. The difference is that you have limited time to create your sculpture. This can end up being better, as you capture their essence, features, and expression with more immediacy. I have a studio in Gryon in the back garden which I use when I’m in Switzerland. It has a beautiful view, which I find very inspiring. The light is also good.

Galerie Alpine: I imagine it's smaller than your family studio in Florence. What other advantages does working in Gryon offer over working in Florence?

Vincenzo Romanelli: My studio in Gryon is tiny compared to the Florence studio which was an old church. It’s very large. In Gryon, I get direct contact with nature. During the winter I go skiing in search of the resident wildlife. The sightings inspire my sculptures. All of my alpine animals have been created after real-life encounters. Last winter I had the rare privilege of spotting a lynx in the Villars backcountry.

Vincenzo’s draws inspiration for his sculptures from his encounters with Swiss wildlife.

Vincenzo’s draws inspiration for his sculptures from his encounters with Swiss wildlife.

Patination on a bronze sculptureSea Urchin, 2018 bronze 40 x 40 x 18 cm

Patination on a bronze sculpture

Sea Urchin, 2018
bronze
40 x 40 x 18 cm

A lynx bronze is part of Vincenzo’s 2021 collection.

A lynx bronze is part of Vincenzo’s 2021 collection.

An armature, roughly resembling the subject, is built in order to provide a foundation for clay modelling.

An armature, roughly resembling the subject, is built in order to provide a foundation for clay modelling.

Vincenzo his and his brother Raffaello are the latest generation of an art dynasty that has endured for two centuries.

Vincenzo his and his brother Raffaello are the latest generation of an art dynasty that has endured for two centuries.

Galerie Alpine: Should we expect to see a lynx sculpture from you in the near future?

Vincenzo Romanelli: I was astonished by the lynx’ beauty, and made a sculpture straight away. I wanted to capture what I felt when I saw her before that feeling faded away. The sculpture is being cast at the Florentine foundry now. It’s part of the 2021 collection, which will be released soon!

Galerie Alpine: Your sculptures are such faithful renderings, and they are truly a personal diary of your experiences with nature. Does each of your sculptures originate in a similar way like your lynx?

Vincenzo Romanelli: Yes, most of my sculptures, especially of undomesticated animals. I refer to books, photos, and documentaries for those which I make just for the pleasure of modelling. Commissions originate from a client’s wish, so they don’t arise from a particular encounter. If it’s a horse or dog, I spend time with them and model them from life. I try to interact or see the animal I’m sculpting. 

Galerie Alpine: I’m sure many people are unaware of all the work that goes into completing a bronze sculpture. How long does the entire process take?

Vincenzo Romanelli: There is no set time. The whole process can take anywhere from one month for a small sculpture to years for monumental sculptures. It depends on the size and the pose, and how complicated the form is. Big commissions and sculptures are made in my family’s Florentine studio as the space can accommodate the large scale. The process starts with the creation of a structure to hold the clay. Clay is applied to the armature, and the details are modelled. The biggest I’ve sculpted so far was a life-size jumping horse which took six weeks just to model in clay. It’s quite fast for that scale, but I worked very long days. Once I arrive at the point where I’m happy with the piece, a negative mould is created using silicon and a plaster shell. After the mould has set, it’s opened and cleaned. The mould is used to create a positive form in wax. This step takes part in the foundry using the traditional lost wax method and is the longest part of the process. 

Galerie Alpine: What part of the process is your favorite?

Vincenzo Romanelli: Modelling in clay, as this is the moment that I interact for the first time with both my creation and my subject. It’s then when I can capture the expression, movement, and pose. I watch as the clay transforms in my hands into a life-like form. I also enjoy the patination of bronze. It’s very exciting, as it gives life and colour to the raw material.

Galerie Alpine: Do you prefer marble or bronze?

Vincenzo Romanelli: Bronze is the best material for the kind of sculptures I make. My great-grandfather Romano believed that a sculptor had to master the carving of a hard stone, but for my subjects and for the texture I give them, marble is often not the right material.

The process of realizing a bronze sculpture has many steps and can be long and arduous.Cinghiale, 2015 bronze 30 x 16 x 23 cm

The process of realizing a bronze sculpture has many steps and can be long and arduous.

Cinghiale, 2015
bronze
30 x 16 x 23 cm

Galerie Alpine: You come from a long line of sculptors. Did you always want to be a sculptor?

Vincenzo Romanelli: I grew up surrounded by art. My father is a sculptor, and my mother is a ceramicist, so I was often playing with clay. I always felt my life would be in the arts. When I was 18 I wanted to replicate the maquette of my great-grandfather’s sculpture of Hercules and the Lion, as I loved the power of the pose. I realised I needed more technique to replicate it, so I studied at the Charles H. Cecil Studios to learn the sight-size technique by sculpting the human figure from life..

Galerie Alpine: You started out with human portraiture and your older brother specializes in human portraiture. Why did you decide to specialize in animals?

Vincenzo Romanelli: I decided to sculpt animals for the variety of the forms and anatomies that the animal kingdom offers. It’s always a new discovery, a new pose, a new expression. I’ve always loved animals. I’m able to get closer to them through my creative process—discovering their behaviours, different anatomies, and habitats. It’s also a way to make people more conscious of and sensitive to the animal kingdom and to connect them to animals, which is evermore vital, as we have become more detached from animals and nature. 

Galerie Alpine: What would you be doing if you were not a sculptor?

Vincenzo Romanelli: I love the fine art world and would probably have been more involved in the family gallery which is still being run by my brother. Otherwise, I’ve always been close to nature growing up in the Tuscan countryside, so I may have chosen something which allows me to be outside and connect with the outdoors. But now that I’ve found my place as a sculptor, I can’t imagine being in another profession.

Vincenzo in his studio in Florence.

Vincenzo in his studio in Florence.

Interview with Alanna Rowntree: Finding Freedom, Balance, and Inspiration

Deep Breath, 2021 acrylic on canvas 80 x 60 cm

Deep Breath, 2021
acrylic on canvas
80 x 60 cm

Galerie Alpine: Bonsoir, Alanna! Are you in Northern Ireland visiting family?

Alanna Rowntree: Yes, after what feels like forever, we had a bit of an epic journey to get here by land and sea! I am from a little seaside town on the coast called Larne, but we spend our time in a gorgeous place called Portstewart. I am finding the sea and the dramatic skies very inspiring since I have been here. They are incredibly moving. I had forgotten.

Galerie Alpine: Your painting Belonging is ocean-inspired. It's quite dramatic.

Alanna Rowntree: Yes, it is. I feel that is really a piece that lots of people have connected with. I am very fond of it. I am very connected to it as well, because feelings of the ocean and those memories are wrapped up in it.

Galerie Alpine: Did you draw inspiration from Portstewart for this particular painting?

Alanna Rowntree: I did. As well as a feeling of longing to be in this place again and the frustration and fear of not knowing when that might be due to Covid.

Galerie Alpine: You started making work again after a long hiatus, during the pandemic. What drew you back to painting during this time?

Alanna Rowntree: It was something I felt absolutely compelled to do actually. I found a blank canvas, and it really called to me! I needed to paint again and find freedom in times of lockdown!

Galerie Alpine: Your paintings have titles like Sisters, Renewed Hope, Deep Breath, Belonging, Finding Balance, and Warm Heart. It makes sense especially through a lens of the pandemic and lockdown. It's truly a pandemic art series.

Alanna Rowntree:  It is! I feel that it is nice to draw a positive from such a negative situation though. The titles are really about the emotions and moments going into each piece. These paintings are all about feelings, revisiting them and working a way through them personally—almost in desperate need to do so!

Renewed Hope, 2021 acrylic on canvas 80 x 70 cm

Renewed Hope, 2021
acrylic on canvas
80 x 70 cm

Galerie Alpine: Your art was representational before, but now you’re exploring an abstract style. Why the switch?

Alanna Rowntree: I have loved trying out a new abstract style, because before painting for me was about trying to represent exactly what I saw, and I tried to make things perfect. Abstract painting is about freedom for me as the artist and for the viewer. I love that it can mean something different for me, and someone else with different experiences in life can see something in it of themselves. I think that’s the beauty and allure of abstract art. I don’t feel there is anything finite about it. I would like viewers to experience something personal, whether it is touching on a particular emotion, or it makes them feel calm to look at it and explore the piece.

Galerie Alpine: Hopefully, the world is on the path the stabilising, and we're seeing the end of the pandemic. How do you think your work will evolve?

Alanna Rowntree: I don’t know, but I like not knowing how it will look. I purposely like to not decide how my finished paintings will look when I begin. The process and building layers are what it is about, and I ‘find’ the finished piece eventually. I love that process of exploring and not knowing. I hope to keep finding more freedom in my work, and, hopefully, it will adapt with me.

Galerie Alpine: Your "purposely unstructured" process!

Alanna Rowntree: Exactly. For a person who worries a lot and gets anxious it is an incredible thing to have that freedom and flow.

Galerie Alpine: You are known to rework and paint over pieces you don't think are working well.

Alanna Rowntree: I do that quite a bit. If it doesn’t feel right for me as it is, I will just start over. It is so refreshing. The process is all part of the finished piece, and all those layers are always going to be there.

Galerie Alpine: Layers are an important component of your paintings. How do you go about creating them?

Alanna Rowntree: I love the process! I really enjoy the process of creating texture. It is very satisfying. There is lots of drying time between layers. A piece can take some time, as I will paint a very messy random layer on top of the gesso texture base for colour. Next, I start to layer and layer my shades. I use gesso and brushes, or sometimes even household items like rock salt and cling film to create the shapes and desired texture! There are the emotional layers that go into the physical layers of paint too.

Galerie Alpine: These aren't simply paintings. They're actually mixed media.

Alanna Rowntree: Yes, and I can see myself going further down that route in the future, as I love the tactile nature of it.

Galerie Alpine: I'm starting to see a common theme in all aspects of your work. It's freedom.

Alanna Rowntree: It is all about finding freedom. It is so liberating. It really is.

Finding Balance, 2021 acrylic on canvas 50 x 60cm

Finding Balance, 2021
acrylic on canvas
50 x 60cm

Renewed Hope, 2021 acrylic on canvas 80 x 70 cm

Renewed Hope, 2021
acrylic on canvas
80 x 70 cm

Artpéro: An Evening of Art and Drinks

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Samedi 31 Juillet 2021, 17-19h
Galerie Alpine, 97 Avenue Centrale, 1884 Villars-sur-Ollon

Open to all: Our members and friends of the Gallery are cordially invited to a cultural evening of art & drinks. Meet local artists, purchase art and enjoy member discounts. Don't forget your mask!

Ouvert à tous: que nos membres et amis de la Galerie sont cordialement invités à la soirée culturelle d'art & apéritif. Rencontrez des artistes locaux, achetez des œuvres d'art et bénéficiez de réductions pour les membres. N’oubliez pas votre masque!