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I want to create art that speaks of the love, anger, loss, personal growth and the private confusions we all experience in our lives. I seek to create stories of authenticity that compress a sense of endurance of the human spirit. Empathy is powerful, and I hope for an unguarded creativity that connects with our shared mutual humanity.
– Andrew Litten
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JD Malat Gallery is pleased to present “Connect”, the second solo exhibition by British artist Andrew Litten, on view in Mayfair from 9 March until 8 April 2023. This exhibition of new work further expands the expressive outreach of Litten’s paintings with innovative and enchanting subject matter.Initially self-taught, Andrew Litten (b. 1970) was determined to break free of restrictive environments, endeavouring to release his creative mind from the chains of societal conventions. Choosing to follow his own path, the artist adopted the inclusive and compassionate approach, sharing the stories of vulnerability and authenticity. Using empathy and connectedness as fundamental roots of his creative expression, Litten perpetually portrays the human metamorphosis, encapsulating love, pain, anxieties, mortality and joy in his colourful and dramatic compositions. The infinite sincerity of Litten’s visual storytelling engages viewers with its genuine and at times poignant perspective, encouraging reflection on one’s own temporality and ability to circumvent the challenges faced throughout one’s lifetime.
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Andrew Litten
True Nature, 2022Litten’s work bears the stamp of authenticity. The meanings of his images may be elusive, but they work on our feelings because they are felt.
– Laura Gascoigne, independent arts writer, including The Spectator, The Tablet, Jackdaw.
Litten’s influences range from Edvard Munch, Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gauguin and Pierre Bonnard to Francis Bacon, Tracey Emin and Louise Bourgeois. Like Bourgeois, Litten mines pain to vivifying effect and it becomes a force for connection. “Through these works, I seek to create stories of authenticity and to explore the part of us that wants to care – to compress a sense of endurance of human spirit,” Litten says.
– Sophie Hastings, freelance features writer, including Observer, The Gentlewoman, GQ, ARTnews.
Andrew Litten: Connect
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