Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Contemporary painter Jonas Wood’s exuberantly colorful portraits: an uncanny blend of realism and abstraction
The latest book from Los Angeles-based artist Jonas Wood (born 1977) follows the style of his previous publications Sports Book and Interiors, this time taking up the subject of portraiture. Portraits compiles the many works completed over Wood’s career, done in a variety of media, and with a range of subjects and sitters, including paintings of artist friends, self-portraits, intimate familial moments in domestic interiors and the artist’s own cultural and sports heroes, from basketball players and boxers to Philip Guston and Pablo Picasso–though Wood’s esteem for these figures is beside the point, as he notes: I don’t depict only those athletes who have meaning for me. Sometimes it is about the images being interesting, or that I like the color of the card, and sometimes it is about loving the athlete. Wood’s subjects are presented in bright light with lively color, graphic flatness and minute detail rendered impeccably.
Jonas Woods: Portraits reveals an intimate look at the life of an artist at the forefront of contemporary painting.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Contemporary painter Jonas Wood’s exuberantly colorful portraits: an uncanny blend of realism and abstraction
The latest book from Los Angeles-based artist Jonas Wood (born 1977) follows the style of his previous publications Sports Book and Interiors, this time taking up the subject of portraiture. Portraits compiles the many works completed over Wood’s career, done in a variety of media, and with a range of subjects and sitters, including paintings of artist friends, self-portraits, intimate familial moments in domestic interiors and the artist’s own cultural and sports heroes, from basketball players and boxers to Philip Guston and Pablo Picasso–though Wood’s esteem for these figures is beside the point, as he notes: I don’t depict only those athletes who have meaning for me. Sometimes it is about the images being interesting, or that I like the color of the card, and sometimes it is about loving the athlete. Wood’s subjects are presented in bright light with lively color, graphic flatness and minute detail rendered impeccably.
Jonas Woods: Portraits reveals an intimate look at the life of an artist at the forefront of contemporary painting.