Within the Environmental Impact in the Era of Pandemic programming, we are thrilled to introduce a recent artwork commission in collaboration with Conservation International by Deborah Azzopardi, Mother Nature (2021), inspired by Conservation International’s film Mother Nature with a powerful voice-over by the Oscar-winning artist and producer Julia Roberts.
For all sales enquiries please contact Cynthia Corbett, Gallery Founder & Director at info@thecynthiacorbettgallery.com
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Andy BurgessLavender Modern, 2020Signed, dated rectoAcrylic on Canvas over Panel101.6 x 152.4 cm
40 x 60 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Andy Burgess1961 Chrysler Ghia 6.4L in front of the Palm Patencio Building in palm Springs , 2020Gouache on Watercolour Paper10.16 x 12.7 cm
4 x 5 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Andy BurgessA-Rod Mansion, Miami , 2021Oil on panel16.51 x 25.4 cm
6 1/2 x 10 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Andy BurgessQuiet Space, 2020Gouache on Watercolour Paper7.6 x 12.7 cm
3 x 5 in. -
Andy BurgessTropical House with Illuminated Pool, 2020Gouache on Watercolour Paper7.6 x 12.7 cm
3 x 5 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Andy BurgessAtrium House, 2020Signed, titled, dated verso in pencilGouache on watercolour paper12.7 x 12.7 x 0.1 cm
5 x 5 x 1/8 in
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Andy BurgessConcrete Desert House, 2018Signed, dated rectoAcrylic on Canvas over Panel76.2 x 101.6 cm
30 x 40 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Andy BurgessTropical House, 2019Signed, dated rectoAcrylic on Canvas121.9 x 182.9 cm
48 x 72 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Andy BurgessLookout House at Dusk, 2020Signed, dated rectoAcrylic on Canvas over Panel101.6 x 152.4 cm
40 x 60 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Klari ReisHypochondria, 150, 2020Petri Dishes, Tee Nuts and Steel RodsDiameter: 152.4 cm
Diameter: 60 inCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Klari ReisHypochondria Exploding, 60 pieces, 2020Mixed Media, Petri Dishes, Tee Nuts and Steel RodsDiameter: 152.4 cm
Diameter: 60 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Klari ReisHypochondria, 30 pieces, Noir, 2019Mixed Media, Petri Dishes, Tee Nuts and Steel Rods221 x 63.5 cm
87 1/8 x 25 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Klari ReisHypochondria, 30 pieces, 2020Mixed Media, Petri Dishes, Tee Nuts and Steel RodsDiameter: 71.1 cm
Diameter: 28 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Klari ReisKin, 2020Mixed Media and Epoxy on Wood114.3 x 91.4 cm
45 x 36 in. -
Klari ReisAmass, 2020Mixed Media and Epoxy on Wood114.3 x 91.4 cm
45 x 36 in. -
Tom LeightonThe Lakes, 2015C-Type digital print, perspex mounted160 x 276.4 cm
63 x 108 3/4 in.Edition of 5 plus 2 artist's proofsCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Tom Leighton7th Avenue, 2013C-Type Digital Print, Perspex Mounted152.4 x 152.4 cm
60 x 60 in.Edition of 5 plus 2 artist's proofsCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Tom LeightonThe Capitol, 2016C-Type Digital Print, Perspex Mounted152.4 x 152.4 cm
60 x 60 in.Edition of 5 plus 2 artist's proofs (#3/5)Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Tom LeightonSkytree, 2017C-Type Print / Perspex Mounted in frame207.1 x 102.6 cm
81.5 x 40.4 in.
Edition of 5Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Tom LeightonGrand Avenue, 2017C-Type Print / Perspex Mounted in frame130.8 x 130.8 cm
51 1/2 x 51 1/2 in.Edition of 5Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Tom LeightonThe Valley, 2017C-Type Print / Perspex Mounted in frame207.1 x 102.6 cm
81.5 x 40.4 in.
Edition of 5Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Isabelle van ZeijlShe Is, 2018C-print mounted on Dibond, Perspex face in tray frameFramed:
113 x 102.9 cm
44 1/2 x 40 1/2 in.Edition of 7 plus 3 artist's proofs (AP 1/3)Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett Gallery -
Isabelle van ZeijlReveal Me, 2021C-print mounted on Dibond, Perspex face in tray frameFramed:
113 x 102.9 cm
44 1/2 x 40 1/2 in.Edition of 7 plus 3 artist's proofs (#1/7)Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Isabelle van ZeijlYouth, 2016C-print mounted on Dibond, Perspex face in tray frameFramed:
113 x 102.9 cm
44 1/2 x 40 1/2 in.Edition of 7 plus 2 artist's proofsCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Isabelle van ZeijlFor Me, 2019C-print mounted on Dibond, Perspex face in tray frame
113 x 102.9 cm
44 1/2 x 40 1/2 in.Edition of 7 plus 3 artist's proofsCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Fabiano ParisiIl Mondo Che Non Vedo, No 231 - Italy 2019, 2019The villa was built in the countryside near Bologna and extended in various stages over the 19th century. In addition to decades of looting and vandalism the villa was hit by an earthquake about five years ago. All the rooms are empty except the grand salon, still with the original furniture and beautiful marble decorations and frescos to decorate the room.
C-Type photograph mounted on Dibond in tray frame110 x 135 cm
43 1/4 x 53 1/8 in.Edition of 8 (#2/8)Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett Gallery -
Isabelle van ZeijlI Am I, 2019C-print mounted on Dibond, Perspex face in tray frameFramed:
113 x 103.1 cm
44 1/2 x 40 1/2 inEdition of 7 plus 3 artist's proofsCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Isabelle van ZeijlI Am II, 2019Featured in Harper's Bazaar June 2019 Art Issue
C-print mounted on Dibond, Perspex face in tray frame
113 x 103.1 cm
44 1/2 x 40 1/2 inEdition of 7 plus 3 artist's proofsCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Isabelle van ZeijlShe Is Here, 2019Featured on the cover of Snoeck magazine, issue on sale in September 2020.
C-print mounted on Dibond, Perspex face in tray frame
Framed:
113 x 102.9 cm
44 1/2 x 40 1/2 in.Edition of 7 plus 3 artist's proofsCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Isabelle van ZeijlThe New Me, 2019C-print mounted on dibond, perspex face in tray frameFramed:
113 x 103.1 cm
44 1/2 x 40 1/2 in
Edition of 7 plus 3 artist's proofsCourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Fabiano ParisiThe Empire of Light No. 1 - USA, 2013C-Type photograph mounted on Dibond in tray frame.
Built in 1922 in Neo-Renaissance style, with frescoes of Italian formal gardens in the auditorium and a giant Hall theatre organ, this was the biggest movie theatre in Connecticut at the time, with 3642 seats. It hosted live shows, concerts and events for decades before it officially closed in 1975.
75 x 110 cm
29 1/2 x 43 1/4 in.Edition of 8Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Fabiano ParisiIl Mondo Che Non Vedo 212, 2017C-Type photograph mounted on Dibond in tray frame.
This is a historic 1,346-seat former boxing venue in Philadelphia, since 1938. The Ring magazine voted it the number-one boxing venue in the world, and Sports Illustrated noted it as the last great boxing venue in the country. Was featured in many movies, as in the Rocky film series. As experienced in some other abandoned spaces in the US, electricity and heating system were still working, trying to preserve the place from decay.
111.8 x 111.8 cm
44 x 44 in.Edition of 8Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Fabiano ParisiThe Empire of Light No. 2, 2013C-Type photograph mounted on Dibond in tray frame.
Newark was once home to multiple historic theatres like this venue, opening its doors in 1886. Was remodelled in 1917 by the famous architect Thomas Lamb, with 1996 seats in Adam style. Closed in 1986, this is an iconic piece from Parisi's photo series, as the layering of history lets the viewer experience a unique sort of time travel.75 x 110 cm
29 1/2 x 43 1/4 in.Edition of 8Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Matt Smith (British)The Hunter, 2021Black Parian and Porcelain
34 x 17 x 10 cm
13 3/8 x 6 3/4 x 4 in. -
Matt Smith (British)Horse, 2018Black Parian18 x 30 x 13 cm
7 1/8 x 11 3/4 x 5 1/8 in.Courtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist -
Matt Smith (British)Two Women, 2020Black Parian and Porcelain30 x 13 cm
11 3/4 x 5 1/8 in. -
Matt Smith (British)Stork II, 2021Black Parian and Porcelain30 x 13 x 16 cm
11 3/4 x 5 1/8 x 6 1/4 in. -
Matt Smith (British)Fighting Cocks, 2020Black Parian and Porcelain30 x 12 x 13 cm
11 3/4 x 4 3/4 x 5 1/8 in. -
Matt Smith (British)Venus Wall sconce, 2021White Earthernware
62 x 28 x 13 cm
24 3/8 x 11 1/8 x 5 1/8 in. -
Matt Smith (British)Pearl Girl Teal, 2021Black Parian, Porcelain and Freshwater Pearls
27 x 14 x 16 cm
10 5/8 x 5 1/2 x 6 1/4 in. -
Matt Smith (British)Red Girl with Pearls, 2021Black Parian, Porcelain and Freshwater Pearls30 x 16 x 13 cm
11 3/4 x 6 1/4 x 5 1/8 in. -
Matt Smith (British)After Fragonard, 2021Reworked textile with wool78 x 116 cm
30 3/4 x 45 5/8 in. -
Matt Smith (British)Gitane, 2021Reworked textile with wool46 x 36 cm
18 1/4 x 14 1/4 in. -
Deborah AzzopardiMother Nature, 2021Inspired by Conservation International's 'Nature is Speaking' film series, created in collaboration with Oscar-winning actress and producer Julia Roberts.Acrylic on 640g paperUnframed
91.4 x 61 cm
36 x 24 in.
Framed
105.4 x 74.9 cm
41 1/2 x 29 1/2 in.
POACourtesy of Cynthia Corbett GalleryCopyright The Artist
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Lauded by Annabel Sampson, Deputy Editor of Tatler as “the next David Hockney” painter Andy Burgess, who hails from London but lives in Arizona, continues to expand upon his fascination with contemporary architecture. A new series of paintings on panel and canvas colourfully re-imagines iconic modernist and contemporary houses. Burgess selects the subjects for his paintings with the discernment of the portrait painter. Buildings are chosen for their clean lines, bold geometric design and dynamic forms. Burgess approaches his subjects with a fresh eye, simplifying and abstracting forms even further and inventing, somewhat irreverently, new color schemes that expand the modernist lexicon beyond the minimalist white palette and rigid use of primary colours. Real places are sometimes re-invented, the architecture and design altered and modified, with new furniture and landscaping and a theatrical lighting that invests the painted scene with a dream-like quality and a peaceful and seductive allure.
In 2021 Andy Burgess will be creating a series of site-specific artworks for the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London. The project, initiated by CW+ – the official charity of the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust – and facilitated by Cynthia Corbett Gallery, which represents Burgess internationally, aims to improve and enhance the NICU environment for patients, relatives and staff.
Working together with the NICU team, Burgess will be reminiscing on the hospital’s neighbourhoods and its iconic views, sights and buildings in collaboration with hospital staff. The selected London scenes will be transformed by the artist in his unique, abstract, geometric style and printed on medically compliant vinyl – to then be installed in corridors and waiting areas of NICU.
“This project inspires me tremendously and I’m excited to be embarking on this creative journey with the hospital and CW+,” explains the artist, Burgess. “I am delighted to have been identified for this unique opportunity and to be working with NICU staff to contribute to the improvement of the environment in this innovative way.”
Burgess, who has made a name for himself exploring the relationship between modernist architecture and contemporary painting, aims to instil the artwork with feelings of positivity and calmness, while staying true to his British and London heritage and his love of early 20th century art, architecture and collage. He will be creating a multi-layered narrative, incorporating his signature open primary colours and clean lines.
Andy Burgess has been represented internationally by Cynthia Corbett Gallery since 2004.
Tom Leighton is an artist, photographer and printmaker. Fascinated by the urban environment, he has photographed and worked with iconic and hidden architecture world-wide. He layers and manipulates images to build increasingly elaborate megastructures, asking how our cities will cope and change with expanding populations, and how these populations will live and move within these urban centres. He has photographed both ancient cities and the newest cities built on land reclaimed from the sea.
Trained at the Royal College of Art, London, Leighton expertly manipulates images to allow us to imagine alternative cities of the present and the future. He seeks beauty in everything, from functional buildings to the most ornate architecture. He repeats motifs in unexpected places, repositions existing structures and contrasts the natural and the artificial: bright city lights set against natural night skies, concrete against greenery, business against eerie nighttime stillness.
Leighton asks us to reconsider our cities, what they are and what they might become. He pushes us to notice the beauty inherent in these populated places, the architecture and our place within it. At once futuristic and reflective, Leighton’s work demands multiple takes.
“My photography is very exploratory – I don’t go on planned ‘photo shoots’, but I am constantly trying to track down exciting architecture or city views. In my work I have complete control as I contort & construct urban spaces. I show a complete disregard for the fundamentals of physics as I introduce gravity defying structures. I chose to use multiple natural light sources to create a collision of shadows and hyper real lighting. All this allows me to produce areas of ambiguity – and by doing so I play with the brains capacity to ignore or falsely correct what doesn’t make sense. My photographs are akin to a memory of a place - a distorted, reconstituted reality”
Leighton has travelled through Europe, Asia and North America, building up an impressive body of photographic images that he then combines to make fantastical landscapes. His works are a celebration of architecture. Crammed with colour, form and energy, they highlight different aspects of the built environment. Structures and colours are carefully crafted to give the impression of populated places. Leighton's works ask playful questions, and show us the beauty and variety of our designed world.
Collections include: AT&T Corporate Collection, USA; Prudential Douglas Elliman, NYC, William Blair, Chicago / London; The Sandor Family Collection, Chicago; The Shein Family Collection of Pennsylvania; The V&A Museum, London; The UBS Art Collection, London; JCA Group, London; MuCEM (French National Museum of European and Mediterranean civilisations) Marseille.
Tom Leighton has been represented internationally by Cynthia Corbett Gallery since 2004.Klari Reis uses the tools and techniques of science in her creative process, constantly experimenting with new ways to apply materials and methods. She is driven by curiosity and her desire to explore and document the natural and unnatural with a sense of wonder and joy. Formally trained as an architect, the artist from her base in San Francisco (in proximity to one of the largest concentrations of life science/technology companies in the world) collaborates with local biomedical companies and is inspired by the cutting edge of biological techniques and discoveries.
The unifying theme of Klari Reis’s art is her mastery of a new media plastic, epoxy polymer, and the fine control she brings to its reactions with a variety of dyes and pigments. Her compositions display brightly coloured smears, bumps and blobs atop aluminum and wood panels. A skilled technician with a studio for a laboratory, Reis uses science in the service of her art.
Klari Reis's work has been exhibited worldwide and public collections include Microsoft Research in Cambridge, UK; Next World Capital’s offices in San Francisco, Paris, and Brussels; MEG Diagnostic Centre for Autistic Children in Oxford, UK; Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children in London; the Stanford University Medical Center Hoover Pavilion in California; and Elan Pharmaceuticals, Genentech, Acetelion and Cytokinetics in South San Francisco.
Klari Reis has been represented by Cynthia Corbett Gallery since 2004.Fabiano Parisi began his career as a photographer following a degree in Psychology, coming to photography through a project photographing derelict asylums, which sparked his interest in the abandoned buildings which are the subject of his art practice today. He has two ongoing series: The Empire of Light and Il Mondo Che Non Vedo (The World I Do Not See). The latter title is taken from a collection of poems by Fernando Pessoa, a hint at the poetic qualities of Parisi’s work. What is so striking about Parisi’s work is his use of light, his relationship not just to history but to the theme of the ruin in Art History, and the composition and surface of his work. The power of Parisi’s work lies in the strength and command of his image-making, never straying from a strictly symmetrical approach, which allows the viewer to assume his viewpoint within the building, the wide-angle lens giving a sense of depth and breadth, without compromising on detail.
Parisi uses only natural light, shooting early in the morning. The colours and chiaroscuro are at their best at this time of day, and are left untouched by digital image manipulation software. Parisi’s photographs have an honesty and integrity that is part of what makes them so inviting. The artist often selects buildings with frescoed walls, which create an illusion of a painterly surface in his photographs and a textural sensibility that belies the photograph’s flat surface. His method highlights the patina of these forgotten places. The artist prints his work himself onto carefully chosen papers that enhance and maximise his colours and tones. Parisi has a strong relationship to Art History; the subject of the ruin was prevalent in the 18th and 19th Centuries, and interest is still strong today as evidenced by Tate Britain’s 2014 exhibition ‘Ruin Lust’. From painters such as Piranesi to Turner to Constable, Parisi is part of an important genre in art.
Parisi participated in the 54th Venice Biennale, Italian Pavilion and in Fotografia Festival Internazionale di Roma in 2012 at the Macro Museum. In 2010 he was the winner of the Celeste Prize International for photography in New York; in 2012 he was shortlist for the Arte Laguna Prize, Venice where he was award a special Prize and in 2012 & 2014 he was shortlisted & announced finalist for the Young Masters Art Prize (a not-for-profit initiative presented by Cynthia Corbett Gallery, London).
Fabiano Parisi is represented internationally by Cynthia Corbett Gallery.In a contemporary art world that condemns beauty as camouflage for conceptual shallowness, championing high aesthetics is nothing short of rebellion. Dutch photographer Isabelle Van Zeijl takes female beauty ideals from the past, and sabotages them in the context of today. Van Zeijl aestheticises contemporary beauty in her work to visually discuss art historical links and a new way of seeing female beauty. Her work is both timeless, universal and uniquely placed in the art historical canon while offering the female gaze.
Van Zeijl is invested in her images. By using subjects that intrigue and evoke emotion, she reinvents herself over and over and has created a body of work to illustrate these autobiographical narratives. Her work takes from all she experiences in life - she is both model, creator, object and subject. Going beyond the realm of individual expression, so common in the genre of self-portraiture, she strives to be both universal and timeless, with a subtle political hint.
Isabelle Van Zeijl has shown work continuously and internationally over the past fifteen years, represented by galleries located in The UK, USA, The Netherlands, Belgium, and exhibiting at emerging and established international art fairs in New York, Miami, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, London, Germany, Belgium, Sweden and Italy. She was nominated for the Prix De La Photographie Paris, and The Fine Art Photography Awards. She was also one of the winners of The Young Masters Emerging Women Art Prize, London. Her work is held in private & public collections in the USA, UK, Belgium, Germany, France and The Netherlands.
Isabelle van Zeijl has been represented by Cynthia Corbett Gallery since 2017.UK-born Matt Smith is well known for his site-specific work in museums, galleries and historic houses. Using clay, textiles and their associated references, he explores how cultural organisations operate using techniques of institutional critique and artist intervention. He is interested in how history is a constantly selected and refined narrative that presents itself as a fixed and accurate account of the past and how, through taking objects and repurposing them in new situations, this can be brought to light.
"What museums collect, and what this tells us about what society deems important, is an ongoing fascination to me. Recent events have shown how important objects, and particularly sculpture, are in the national debate about who we are and how we got here," – Smith says.
Matt Smith's large scale solo shows have addressed themes including the legacy of colonisation in Losing Venus (Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford) and Flux: Parian Unpacked (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge), LGBT visibility in Queering the Museum (Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, 2010) and Other Stories (Leeds University Art Collection, 2012). Matt co-directed and curated Unravelling the National Trust which saw over thirty artists working with contemporary craft, including himself, commissioned to respond to the histories of the National Trust properties Nymans House, Uppark House and The Vyne. He is Professor of Ceramics and Glass at Konstfack University of the Arts, Stockholm and Honorary Fellow at the University of Leicester’s School of Museum Studies. His work is held in the collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Walker Art Gallery, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery and the Fitzwilliam Museum as well as numerous private international collections. In 2014 Smith was awarded the inaugural Young Masters Maylis Grand Ceramics Prize .
Matt Smith is internationally represented by Cynthia Corbett Gallery.
Deborah Azzopardi acquired her worldwide fame for the joyous Pop Art images she has created over the past 35 years. Her unique and feminine take on contemporary art is best described by the esteemed art critic Estelle Lovatt: ‘America has Lichtenstein, we have Azzopardi!’ Lovatt goes on to comment: “Sometimes you just want to curl up under a blanket. With a good book. A piece of chocolate. A man. This is what Deborah Azzopardi’s pictures make me feel like doing. They are me. They remind me of the time I had a red convertible sports car. I had two, actually. And yes, they are you, too. You immediately, automatically, engage with the narrative of Azzopardi’s conversational visual humour. Laughter is the best aphrodisiac, as you know. ... There’s plenty of art historical references from... Manet’s suggestive ‘Olympia’; Boucher’s thought-provoking... ‘Louise O’Murphy’ and Fragonard’s frivolous, knickerless, ‘The Swing’.... Unique in approach, you easily recognise an Azzopardi picture. ... Working simple graphics and toned shading (for depth), the Pop Art line that Azzopardi sketches is different to Lichtenstein’s. Hers is more curvaceous. Feminine.”
The world is familiar with Azzopardi’s artworks, as many of them have been published internationally. Her original paintings, such as the Habitat ‘Dating’ series (2004/08), the iconic ...One Lump Or Two? (2014) and Love Is The Answer (2016), created by the artist at the request of Mitch and Janis Winehouse as a tribute to their daughter, are in great demand. This year we are pleased to bring to Expo CHGO Azzopardi's new special commission for Conservation International, Mother Nature (2020).
Deborah Azzopardi is represented internationally by Cynthia Corbett Gallery.