Jennifer Simon

Jennifer Simon has put her mark on the art world with her unique depiction of urban cityscapes, people, and her life experiences both traveling & living abroad in the UK and Australia. Her art explores our ever-changing world and celebrates the evolution of the UAE, the embrace of western culture and the great moments that have united its people. Jen has worked with many organizations and charities recently completing a four year art residency at Ewa’a Shelter for Women and Children, teaching art to victims of Human Trafficking. Supported by ADMAF, The Series of Silent Voices exhibitions not only generated widespread awareness, boosted the self esteem of the girls but also raised Aed 473,345 for the Shelter to help with rehabilitation.  Her Mural Mania Project, which kicked off last year also brings murals to schools and allows students to create permanent wall art and installations.

Jen also does Corporate Team building and Community Mural projects, working with Cleveland Clinic, Seven Sea’s, Abu Dhabi Art fair, Jam Jar, Lexus, Aldar, Abu Dhabi Film Festival and many more.

She has exhibited in the U.A.E, Denmark, U.S.A and Australia.  In 2008 she launched her Limited edition print series which has seen her art work go global.

 

Jen is also largely known for “Painting people’s lives”.  These are personalized commission artworks tailored to the individual.  The waiting list is a minimum three months period.

View Jennifer Simon Portfolio

 

On the Wall 25th March – 15th June 2012

An exhibition of works following our On The Wall programme which ran during Art Week.

A colourful and vibrant collection of works by Paul Wadsworth, Sylvia Woodcock Clarke , Lynette Ten Krooden , John Harris, Astrid Harrisson and Marcus Hodge.

Sketches in pen and ink, pastels, oils, watercolours, photographs, framed and unframed these works speak for themselves.

Focus on Jewellery

April 14th & 15th.

Featuring exquisite jewellery by Anne Farag, Sue Tyson and Qide by Leylan Savasman, Oytun Camcigil and Mogambo.  Also previewing our new collection of Antique Yemeni and Omani Jewellery.

 

Oytun Camcigil

Originally from Turkey, Oytun has been living in the Gulf since 1981.  She completed a Masters in Architecture before choosing to express her creativity through jewellery design and production.  She fashions some of the most endearing and beautiful mixtures of tribal and modern jewellery.  Her background of design and symmetry combined with a love for tradional Middle Eastern jewellery has resulted in a striking blend of ethnic yet avante garde designs with a combination of sterling silver, silver plated with 24 kt. gold and semi precious stones such as turquoise, lapis, cornelian, hematite and coral.

View Oytun Camcigil Portfolio

Build A Collection – Mar2012

Each month, to help you build on your existing collection or to make the first move we will be offering a significant piece at a price to suit your ‘Building a Collection’ Budget.

The Majlis Gallery is renown for the depth and breadth of our collection of original artwork.

Buying an original piece can seem daunting but we are here to ensure that it is an exciting , enjoyable and affordable experience.

Build A Collection artwork this month is by Sylvia Woodcock Clarke

 

Fish market – 53 x 67 cms – Mixed Media
Build A Collection Price Dhs. 2,500

Click here to order.

We can help you Build your Collection.  Our passion is art, so let’s build.

Omani Sketchbook – Paul Wadsworth

Until 31st March 2012. 

A highly likeable character who lives life to the full Paul is a serious painter with a serious following but such fun too.

In his words “A painting is a combination of many things but, for me, becomes finished when a balance of chaos and control is found through the use of composition, colour, movement and self.

The desert landscape surrounding Dubai and the lush Hajar Mountains inspire many of the works; particularly the small, coastal enclave of Oman, the Mussandam with its stunning rock faces that through the process of time have produced a diversity of patterns, colours and shapes. Signs of ancient and present dwellings exist, mainly fishing villages that seem to merge into the mountains.

Painting out in the landscape in is a great inspiration; the moods of the sea, the big skies, deserts changing colour through the day, The tools Paul uses are brushes, pallet knives, large paint scrapers and quite often his hands. Paint is applied and quite often scraped off then reapplied until he can feel his way into the painting. This process can sometimes take awhile before something starts to happen on the canvas. He aims not to start a painting with too many preconceptions thus allowing for the work to change and develop with as much freedom as possible.

Sylvia Woodcock Clarke – March 2012

Learn from Sylvia Woodcock Clarke, a very serious painter who strongly believes that art need not always be about serious subjects. She has an incredible capacity for visual recall, with a mind like a sketch book, full of moments witnessed and experienced, drawings and paintings flow in her bold fluid style, a product of years of working at her craft.

Wed 21st/Thurs 22nd, March 2012 The Art of Sketching

Sat 24th/ Sun 25th, March 2012 The Art of Sketching

Tues 27th/ Wed 28th, March 2012 The Art of Sketching

Stephen E Meakin – March 2012

Learn from Stephen E. Meakin – A Geometer, Architect, Artist and Antiquarian leading the field in Sacred Geometry as Mandala painting through the shear depth and breadth of his research.

Sat 17th/Sun 18th MarchSacred Geometry

Tues 20th/Wed 21st March – Sacred Geometry

Sat 24th/ Sun 25th March – Masterclass Sacred Geometry

Stephen E Meakin

Stephen E. Meakin (b1966). Geometer, Architect, Artist and Antiquarian leads the field in Sacred Geometry as Mandala painting through the shear depth and breadth of his research. After studying Design at Bournemouth in the late 80’s he went on to travel some of the worlds Sacred Sites only to return to school to read Architecture and Interior Design at The University of Brighton. His research led him away from modern trends in design towards the megalithic temples of the ancients and traditional ornamentation. This inspired him to manifest some beautiful paintings combining traditional Islamic geometrical patterns with Celtic knot-work. In 2002 he left the world of commercial architecture to read Fine Art for his Masters degree and he has recently been offered a place at The Prince of Wales Institute of Architecture in London to read a PhD in Visual Islamic & Traditional Art being tutored by the worlds finest geometers.

View Stephen E Meakin Portfolio

Wosene Worke Kosrof

The exhibition title, From Spoken to Seen, focuses our attention on the elegant and versatile calligraphic symbols at the core of his paintings. Wosene (his professional name) is the first Ethiopian-born contemporary painter to extract the Amharic script – the major language of Ethiopia – from its literal conventions to create a series of works that range from expressive, bold, and intense compositions to quiet, almost monochromatic, delicate works. His use of script as ‘word/play,’ as Wosene describes it, is now recognized internationally as his artistic signature.

During the past thirty years, Wosene has produced five major series of paintings in which he has defined‘aesthetics of script’: Graffiti Magic (1980-1987); Africa: The New Alphabet (1988-1994); Color of Words (1995-2003); Words: From Spoken to Seen (2004-2008). In his current series Wordplay (2009-present), painting has become an intense process of ‘dialoguing’ with the script images, exploring the versatility and playfulness of their surfaces and interiors, dissecting and reconfiguring their ‘bones,’ observing how they move and interact. He elongates, distorts inverts, dissects, and recombines the images, and turns them inside out to discover their moods, tempers, personalities, and voices. The script images become then a language in themselves that speak to international audiences on the wonder of the human drama.

Considered by art historians and art critics as a master colorist, Wosene describes his creative process: “I don’t pre-sketch paintings; my process is exploratory: an interplay of accident and intention, of mastery and uncertainty, of curiosity and discovery. Quick-drying acrylics allow me to easily build and destroy colors and figures on canvas. I use a wide-ranging palette, from bold primary colors to muted tones that look almost repellent on my palette, but that smoothly integrate into a composition; to black and white paintings with bare touches of color; to works in several tones of a single color.”

Since his student years at the School of Fine Art in Addis Ababa (BFA, 1972), and his graduate studies at Howard University in Washington, D.C. (MFA, 1980), jazz has asserted a major influence on his work. Like jazz music, the script provides a repertoire of dense, yet supple elements that lend themselves well to visual improvisation. Jazz also influences his sense of composition: like improvisational music, the language symbols become juxtaposed on canvas in nonverbal ‘word-plays’ to create a visual harmony of rhythm, contrast, and movement.

Wosene’s paintings are in permanent museum collections, including the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, Washington, DC; The Newark Museum, New Jersey; Neuberger Museum, New York; Birmingham Museum of Art, Alabama; Voelkerkunde Museum, Switzerland; Fowler Museum, California; National Museum, Ethiopia; and in many international private and corporate collections. He resides in Addis Ababa and Berkeley, California and works in his studio in Oakland, California.

View Wosene Worke Kosrof Portfolio