LOS ANGELES, CA.- BLUM announced the representation of Berlin-based artist Tom Anholt, in collaboration with Josh Lilley, London.
Anholt explores the human condition through paintings composed of florid allegory, rich narratives, and otherworldly landscapes that mine the imagination as well as the visual lexicons of Hellenic antiquity, Persian miniature painting, European Romanticism, and beyond. Anholts paintings often take as their subject matter serene nature scenes that tap keenly into sentiments of tranquility and contentment. Enacting what venerated philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer espoused as arts function, Anholts vignettes provide a moment of pleasant escapism and a respite from the pressures associated with existence.
Anholts brushwork straddles the line between the semiotic implications of representation and the ineffable emotive qualities of abstraction. Referencing the artists curated repository of tropes and imaginary settings, each work on linen places a strong emphasis on composition and the hand. This signature style breaks each scene down to its most essential spatial components of form, light, and color to further highlight the buoyancy of feeling that seems to radiate out from these dazzling scenes.
Tom Anholt lives and works in Berlin, Germany. He holds a BA from the Chelsea College of Art and Design, London, UK, and studied at Konstfack University of Arts, Crafts and Design, Stockholm, Sweden. Anholts work was the subject of the solo presentation Time Machine at Kunstverein Ulm, Germany (2018) and featured in group presentations at the Marciano Art Foundation, Los Angeles, CA (2023); Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany (2020); and KH7 Artspace, Arhaus, Denmark (2018). His work is represented in numerous public collections including Collection DBC, Copenhagen, Denmark; Collection Majudia, Montreal, Canada; Marciano Art Foundation, Los Angeles, CA; and M Woods, Beijing, China.
Tom Anholt's Brewing Storm (2024) is featured at BLUM's booth for this year's edition of Art Basel. Visit booth K18 at Messe Basel, Switzerland, to see the work in person.