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Mood Lighting
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A similar sense of detachment is felt in a series of figurative paintings by Juan de la Rica. His subject is the female nude, depicted with classically voluptuous curves, smooth skin and bouncy hair. While these women seem to inhabit familiar roles – in one painting wearing sports socks and flicking a foot coyly into the air – they are distracted, their expressions alternately conveying boredom and melancholy. Across these works, as in an accompanying series of still lifes of flowers and glistening fruit, meaning emerges through the relationship between form, colour and space rather than through a fixed storyline. The compositions resist resolution, inviting the viewer to sit in their ambiguity and find meanings of their own.A similar pair of socks reappear in a painting by Nicholas Bono Kennedy, in which we glimpse a couple entwined on a sofa behind a table bearing an oversized vase of flowers and untouched plates of food. In this work, as across the exhibition, the view out of the window – here, a nighttime cityscape of New York – draws us out of the scene, suggesting a feeling of restlessness or discontent. In other works, Bono Kennedy explores how subtle or surprising details can drastically alter a mood or imagined narrative. Take, for instance, the depiction of a meal in a conservatory-like space filled with verdant leafy plants, flowers and dappled sunlight. It is every part the perfect picture, like something you might see in an interiors magazine, only there is a horse at the table. Its presence is at once magical and overwhelming, introducing a feeling of excess and claustrophobia. Horses recur in another painting, rearing up out of nowhere into a living room, turning a quiet moment into one filled with potential danger, the sleeping dog on the sofa suggesting another narrative: the hunt. These are works that seduce only to lead us into a much stranger and more uncertain place.Across the exhibition, we are captivated by the sensuality of the surface – vivid colours, ripe fruit, glowing light – drawn into scenes that feel intimate yet curiously mediated. Desire flickers through these paintings, but it is a self-conscious desire, one that seems to both play into and hesitate under our gaze.
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Nicholas Bono Kennedy, Breakfast for Dinner, 2026 -
Nicholas Bono Kennedy, We're both looking at the same moon, 2026 -
Nicholas Bono Kennedy, Uninvited Guest, 2026 -
Nicholas Bono Kennedy, Sleeping in, 2026
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Nicholas Bono Kennedy, Skunk Season, 2026 -
Nicholas Bono Kennedy, End of that Strange Summer, 2026 -
Nicholas Bono Kennedy, Archway in Pink, 2026 -
Adrian Kay Wong, Thank You (II), 2026
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Adrian Kay Wong, Hold On, 2026 -
Adrian Kay Wong, Ikebana, 2026 -
Adrian Kay Wong, Kowloon, 2026 -
Adrian Kay Wong, Vase and Offerings, 2026
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Juan de la Rica, Amanecer rosa, 2026 -
Juan de la Rica, Boceto fiebre, 2026 -
Juan de la Rica, Boceto para melancólica, 2026 -
Juan de la Rica, Boceto para Venus, 2026
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Mood Lighting: Adrian Kay Wong, Adrian de la Rica, Nicholas Bono Kennedy
Current viewing_room




