Esther Barend
Outer Journey:
I went to Galerie Rue Toulouse art gallery on Royal
Street. I was drawn in from a painting I
saw through the window. I was unable to
take pictures (even if they were for school).
The paintings were done by Esther Barend. By the time I got up to guy in the gallery
many of the other students had come into the gallery so I was unable to ask him
any questions. He did give me a flyer,
but I decided to do my own research.
Esther was born into a family of artists in the Netherlands. She first began with jewelry making and then
went onto the Academy of Fine Arts.
After about 3 years she felt she had to go her own way, this is where
she tirelessly worked on finding her style (Boy, did it pay off!) Barend’s painting can be found in collections
in USA, Europe, United Arab Emirates, Japan, and Australia.
Esther uses what appears to be oil paints. She uses dimension to her advantage, layering
paint on top of each other to bring it to life.
One thing that I noticed is she doesn’t stick to complimentary colors
(Red with green, orange with blue, and yellow with purple, she uses a lot of
contrast. This draws your eyes to
different parts of the picture, as if there is always more to discover. She says she doesn’t like to have
close-minded pictures where it could only represent one thing. She uses her style of painting to encourage
viewers to use their own imagination.
Upon viewing her website, I discovered she also does
abstract paintings and portraits in black and white as well. Esther clearly has an eye (and talent) for
art. Her abstract pieces spoke to me as
much as her portrait pieces. They use the same brush style and dimension work,
but are very open to interpretation. She
has a beautiful red abstract piece that is unlike her other paintings as red is
the only color used. It’s deep,
profound, and bold. If ever given the
opportunity I would love to own a piece or two from her collection.
Inner Journey:
I enjoy art, of all kinds.
When it comes to art I have to be drawn to it, it doesn’t matter if it
is realism or abstract. Esther Barend’s art drew me in off the streets. I saw through the windows her paintings and
walked right in, I wasn’t even sure if my friends had followed me. I didn’t even bothering looking at other
pictures in the gallery because I had already found the one that spoke to
me. I feel what drew me to her work was
I could feel the emotion in the painting, it was like that old saying, “if
walls could talk”. Well if these
paintings could talk I bet I could have listened all day. Her paintings weren’t flat, there was
dimension to them, often colors that would be conflicting of each other laid
right next to each other. I think her
art spoke to me through emotions. It was
like these women in the paintings were not perfect, but they were
beautiful. It reminded me of basic human
connection. Every person has a story
that includes pain, anguish, happiness, success, and failure and I felt that is
what Esther was conveying in her portrait paintings. I think I like this so much because I am a
very in tune person to other’s emotions. I care about who a person is, what their story
is, and where they are going and I felt that the paintings were
displaying. It was like with each color
represented a different emotion and how that person felt it depended on how
heavy the paint was laid or how long the brush stroke was. I think the way she paints can elicit a new
emotion each time you see her paintings depending on how the viewer’s emotions
are for the day. That day I saw
imperfect women in the paintings, wearing their past as a badge of honor,
looking beautiful as ever.
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