ROSS TAYLOR
Ross Taylor lives and works in the Macedon Ranges, a vast region of Central Victoria, Australia known for its wild terrains and expansive forests. Much of Taylor’s recent artistic practice is influenced by this epic landscape, one that wildly conflicts with his previous environment in the north of England, and is also a marked change to some of his earlier work. Taylor’s work plays with the ancient and the every day, the sacred and the banal, with extraordinary use of colour that captivates the viewer.
The artist is intrigued by memory and how one can recall or retell an experience, whether that be what we conjure up in our minds or that which he, as a painter, evokes for the viewer. Taylor states that he “tries to convey what I can see in front of me, but also what is behind me and what I cannot see”. There is vivid luminosity in each piece and the carefully considered colours present to the viewer work that is drenched in vibrancy, yet still visible are aspects of a somewhat dark and desolate scene left by bushfires that ripped through the region just over half a decade ago.
Taylor’s work seeks to respond to the complexity of an ever-changing landscape, and in particular, the way in which nature can evolve and regenerate itself after such events. These contrasting images coalesce on canvas to create original yet incredibly beautiful and visually stunning depictions of one’s surroundings.
ROSS TAYLOR (b. 1982 Northumberland, England) Ross currently lives and works in Melbourne, Australia. Taylor completed a BA in Fine Art at the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne in 2005. Prior to this Taylor studied at Academie De Bildenden Kunst, Germany, where he graduated in 2004.
Solo exhibitions include: A Knowing History, Alexander Berggruen, New York, (2024); Losing Track, Scott Miller Projects, Alabama (2024); Time of the Season, BEERS London (2022); Northern Romantic, Sophie Gannon Gallery, Melbourne (2021); Field Notes, Bendigo Art Gallery, Bendigo (2020) and; A Foreign Affair, Sophie Gannon Gallery, Melbourne (2019).
Group exhibitions include: Landscape, Reimagined, presented by BEERS, Saatchi Gallery, London (2024); Family & Friends, BEERS London, London (2023); Optimism, Sophie Gannon Gallery, Melbourne (2023); The Natural World: Part II, Alexander Berggruen, New York (2022); Sovereign Asian Art Prize, Hong Kong (2021); Making Paradise, Aga Khan, London (2021) and; Spring, Sophie Gannon Gallery, Melbourne (2020).
Fairs include: Dallas Art Fair, with Alexander Berggruen Gallery, Dallas, USA (2023) and; KIAF Art Fair, Eligere Gallery, Seoul, Korea (2022).
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THE LANDSCAPE, REIMAGINED
2 Aug - 20 Sep 2024BEERS London returns to Saatchi Gallery with The Landscape, Reimagined, a group exhibition including eight internationally-based emerging and mid-career artists who reinterpret the conventions of landscape painting as radical and contemporary.Read more -
FAMILY & FRIENDS
30 Nov - 20 Dec 2023Our final exhibition of 2023 brings together existing and longstanding gallery artists (Hyangmok Baik, Jonni Cheatwood, Deborah Segun) alongside those whose solo exhibitions begin in 2024: including Liam Alvy, Jack Kabangu, Tang Shuo, and Christina Zimpel. Also exhibiting in the group show are a slate of fresh new perspectives, including Peter Larsen, Zoe Spowage, Hannah Wilson and more. The purpose of this exhibition is to introduce new artists into our roster amidst the artists whose practices we have championed for some time. We anticipate an exciting mix to present to our friends, collectors, and followers.Read more -
ROSS TAYLOR: TIME OF THE SEASON
24 Jul - 3 Sep 2022BEERS London is extremely pleased to present the London debut solo exhibition of British artist Ross Taylor, entitled Time of the Season. Taylor’s dreamlike, whimsical landscapes link the fantastical and every day, through an extraordinary use of colour and his remarkable technical prowess – these landscapes, possibly located somewhere between his native Britain and his adopted home of Australia, present a nostalgic, sentimentalized view of the natural world.Read more