Oil Addiction and Identity
The end of Textbooks
Things which don't go away
Ace Combat: Joint Assault
Sitting Room Teaser
Give Peace a Chance
Mark Ryden
Welcome to wonderland

Mark Ryden creates surrealist-inspired paintings of corrupted children in provocative relationships. His works combine a saccharine cartoon-like sensibility with a detailed fullness and a creepy combination of numerology, little girls, Catholic and Buddhist symbolism, and carnivalesque Americana. His work ranges from large highly-polished oil paintings to small black-and-white works on paper. His work is influenced by the fantastic art of Alice in Wonderland.

Little Boy Blue
Oil on Canvas  2001  20" x 20"

58 The Apology
Oil on canvas  2006  24" x 32" 

The Ecstacy of Cecelia
Oil on Canvas  1998  26" x 31"

The Butcher Bunny
Oil on Panel  2000  16" x 16"

mark2

mark3

mark4

 

Comments

Please log in to leave a comment.
You need to have been a member for 24 hours and validated your email before leaving a comment.
 
Black Button- Dark Heart Productions
24 aug  |  Black Button- Dark Heart Productions . . read more
Want to get raped for Art? HPD tells you how
8 oct  |  People of today are so used to viewing people being blown to smithereens, car crashes, prostitute love, and soft core porn on a daily basis that you may think nothing can shock us anymore- by Kara Jensen- Mackinnon . . read more
Virtual Walk through Tate Modern's 'Pop Life'
3 oct  |  Virtual Walk through Tate Modern's 'Pop Life' . . read more
Chris Ballantyne
14 jul  |  Chris Ballantyne's alien landscapes . . read more
Damien Hirst is a genius, everyone that thinks otherwise is an idiot.
7 oct  |  Too many times have I sat across the table from someone at a drunken party who thinks they know a thing or two about art.  And too many times has the conversation turned ugly when infamous YBA Damien Hirst is mentioned- by Kara Jensen-Mackinnon . . read more
Alice in Wonderland- A Tim Burton Interpretation
14 sep  |  Alice in Wonderland- A Tim Burton Interpretation . . read more
Pyrotechnics
10 may  |  The firework drawings of Rosemarie Fiore . . read more
The Fable of Annabel Lee
28 sep  |  The Fable of Annabel Lee . . read more
Fiona Lowry
1 aug  |  When you go out in the woods today . . read more
Of Clouds, Machines that steal Dreams
18 sep  |  Of Clouds, Machines that steal Dreams . . read more
blogs   100words
 
by Jack Freeman

As four months of travel in India is coming to an end I am finding
it continually confusing that many of the cultural atrocities that
come with this society of 1 billion strong are deemed "interesting"
and "profound".

Sitting in social circles from hostel to hostel, I have met forceful disagreement with my criticisms of the oppressive nature of India's cast system and their large Islamic community. The smug, "oh, you just don't get it" attitude you receive for owning such opinions is both condescending and misguided.

This is an enraging example of the pseudo, naive belief that this "exotic"society is unintelligible to (most of) us westerners. In this beautiful, richly diverse and all round fun country where, by the same token, you will be greeted by zero empathy of female lib, homosexual equality or my own personal faithlessness, I wish that travelers would not deny their education and morals on arrival. Is it not possible to balance both romance and a sense of rationality?