Jeremy Herndl
(1972
)

Forest View, 2024

oil on linen

40 × 44 in

 44 x
 40

 in

 111.76 x
 101.6

 cm

$6,000

plus shipping & taxes


About the work

This studio painting is of an abandoned power plant in Jordan River, Canada. The plant and the nearby log have rendered this river sterile where once is was teeming with salmon and other wildlife. The structure is slowly dissolving into the temperate rainforest adorned with the agency of youth, artists, and partiers. This painting embodies Herndl’s central axis underpinning his practice, namely that humans, the built environment, language & culture, and the wilderness are all part of nature.

 

Medium Painting
Signature Signed
Frame Unframed
Condition excellent
Seller Artist
Location Victoria, Canada
Provenance The Artist

Jeremy Herndl

Canadian
(1972
)

Contemporary artist Jeremy Herndl’s mesmerizing outdoor paintings are known for their richly saturated tones that capture the verdant, ever-shifting nature of light, colour and shadow through an interplay of loose brushwork and brilliant edges steeped in richly saturated light. Herndl’s paintings offer a contemporary reconsideration of what it means to engage with notions of nature, environmentalism, and the legacy of landscape painters’ engagement with national identity. As Herndl says, “my approach is based on the tradition of working from life but with an awareness of the inseparability of life and culture.”

Rooted in the Western tradition of landscape painting, Herndl’s works nonetheless reinvigorate the genre through a contemporary context that address how nature is informed by discourses about decolonization, ecosystems. Informed as much by Abstract Expressionism as by the rich history of landscape paintings in his native Canada, such as the rich legacies of the Group of Seven and Emily Carr, Herndl describes his approach as one of “receptivity and service” between humans and nature. The site-specificity of his paintings highlight the endangered ecosystems of ancient forests, where climate change and the active logging industry have pushed to the brink of extinction.

Born in Surrey, British Columbia, Herndl received his MFA from Emily Carr University of Art + Design in 2011 and his BFA from NSCAD in 1996. The recipient of many grants and awards, Herndl most recently received the Helen Frankenthaler Fellowship (2019), the BC Arts Council Research and Development Grant (2018) and the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundations Grant (2017). Since 2010, he has participated in exhibitions at the Surrey Art Gallery, Open Space Art Society, Two Rivers Gallery in Prince George, BC and GoCart Gallery in Visby, Sweden.

His work is in permanent collections across North America and Europe, including the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Surrey Art Museum, The University of Victoria, The City of Victoria, The West Vancouver Museum, The City of Surrey, The Alberta Foundation for the Arts, and The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Internationally, his work is in corporate and private collections across the USA and Europe, including Brucebo Foundation and Koncepthus in Sweden.

Tags

Make an Offer

Forest View
Currency(Required)
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Artwork Enquiry

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.