Georgia Dymock British, b. 1998
Earthly Delight, 2025
oil on panel
40 x 30 cm
Georgia Dymock's practice borrows inspiration from a variety of art historical movements, most notably Surrealism, Pop-Art, Fragmented Cubism, and Neo-Classicism. Rendered in bold colours, the voluminous anthropomorphic figures intermingle with...
Georgia Dymock's practice borrows inspiration from a variety of art historical movements, most notably Surrealism, Pop-Art, Fragmented Cubism, and Neo-Classicism. Rendered in bold colours, the voluminous anthropomorphic figures intermingle with geometric shapes and curvaceous landscapes, occupied by further fairytale creatures and objects.
Drawing inspiration from a multitude of sources, Dymock then brings her imagery together into the digital realm using digital programming illustrators. Dymock morphs these elements into new compositions and subsequently translates them onto the pictorial surface. Once the canvas is evolving, she further develops the rendering, going back and forth between digital and analogue media, each informing the other in an ever-evolving exchange of inspiration. The result of this process is a mixed media collage which is eventually concluded onto the canvas, achieving a smooth-to-the-touch finish where brushstrokes cease to exist.
Georgia Dymock (b.1998, British) lives in London and is represented by Gillian Jason Gallery. Dymock holds an MFA in Fine Art Painting from Slade School of Fine Art (2023), a GradD from the Chelsea College of Art (2020), and a Bsc in Anthropology from UCL (2019). Dymock won the 2023 Cass Art Prize, has been selected as one of the 2024 New Contemporaries, and is amongst the Ingram Prize finalists 2024. Her work features in international private collections as well as in the institutional collection of the Museum Inima de Paula, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Drawing inspiration from a multitude of sources, Dymock then brings her imagery together into the digital realm using digital programming illustrators. Dymock morphs these elements into new compositions and subsequently translates them onto the pictorial surface. Once the canvas is evolving, she further develops the rendering, going back and forth between digital and analogue media, each informing the other in an ever-evolving exchange of inspiration. The result of this process is a mixed media collage which is eventually concluded onto the canvas, achieving a smooth-to-the-touch finish where brushstrokes cease to exist.
Georgia Dymock (b.1998, British) lives in London and is represented by Gillian Jason Gallery. Dymock holds an MFA in Fine Art Painting from Slade School of Fine Art (2023), a GradD from the Chelsea College of Art (2020), and a Bsc in Anthropology from UCL (2019). Dymock won the 2023 Cass Art Prize, has been selected as one of the 2024 New Contemporaries, and is amongst the Ingram Prize finalists 2024. Her work features in international private collections as well as in the institutional collection of the Museum Inima de Paula, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.