Dale Jones-Evans [email protected]1 Dale Jones-Evans Artist The last painting Dale painted at art school was a self-portrait (1977); he then studied architecture and became a nationally awarded architect by age 36, (1991). Dale preferred to paint buildings and early on experimented with art-furniture. Dale often designed objet d’art’ moments within his architectural commissions. From door handles, seats, lights and lighting to scaled up decorative elements and complex surfaces to big screen walls. During 2002 Dale began designing a series of public art projects and in 2004 returned to practicing as an artist producing, drawings, digital paintings, video-sound and performance installations. Dale’s unique multidisciplinary skills fuse art, design and architecture, disciplines he carries in his head as well as in collaboration with others. Dale’s one man exhibitions are often staged for one night in galleries (non- commercial) he designs inside his own property projects. Space and light as seen through the eyes of an artist and architect, underpin the materialisation of his work generally. Dale investigates a psychological spatialisation of atmosphere; a spatialisation located outside three dimensions and five senses, outside the human mind which alludes to an insight of and imagining infinity.
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Dale Jones-Evans [email protected] 1 Dale Jones-Evans Artist The ...
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The last painting Dale painted at art school was a self-portrait (1977); he then studied architecture and became a nationally awarded architect by age 36, (1991). Dale preferred to paint buildings and early on experimented with art-furniture. Dale often designed objet d’art’ moments within his architectural commissions. From door handles, seats, lights and lighting to scaled up decorative elements and complex surfaces to big screen walls.
During 2002 Dale began designing a series of public art projects and in 2004 returned to practicing as an artist producing, drawings, digital paintings, video-sound and performance installations. Dale’s unique multidisciplinary skills fuse art, design and architecture, disciplines he carries in his head as well as in collaboration with others. Dale’s one man exhibitions are often staged for one night in galleries (non-commercial) he designs inside his own property projects.
Space and light as seen through the eyes of an artist and architect, underpin the materialisation of his work generally. Dale investigates a psychological spatialisation of atmosphere; a spatialisation located outside three dimensions and five senses, outside the human mind which alludes to an insight of and imagining infinity.