Úrsula ROMERO

27 Degrees

Stephen Ongpin Fine Art

This very large watercolour is part of a recent series of works devoted to blue flowers, on which Úrsula Romero has been working for the past several years, and which has taken her as far afield as the island of Tasmania in Australia. As has been noted, ‘Úrsula Romero has been immersed in the colour blue since 2017, exploring what this intense and captivating colour means to us culturally; why regardless of race or religion, it is the worlds’ favourite colour and why paradoxically it is so rare in nature. In the footsteps of the 18th Century Romanticists, Úrsula has been travelling across the globe in her search for the unattainable; seeking new ways of depicting the beauty of blue flowers with each journey she takes…Blue Flower is not a theoretical and rational study of botanical art, but an exploration of the visual directions in which the natural world can lead us…Blue Flower will remain unfinished.’

According to the artist, this monumental watercolour of poppies was done soon after she met the enigmatic British artist Nick Fudge in Spain. As she has noted of the present work, ‘I decided to title the painting ‘27 Degrees’ because the petals of the central flower make a cross, a destined cross that is also present in the astrology charts of two people who both had eclipse points at 27 degrees of the fixed signs - YBA Nick Fudge and myself. We met back on 4th May 2019 in a village in Granada. It was an unexpected event that shook up my world, the way I paint, and the way I saw other paintings. For the next three years, Nick taught me the history of art and we developed a friendship through correspondence during the Pandemic. He was isolated in Lisbon at the time and I myself in a small isolated house in the mountains of Granada. The painting 27 Degrees is about this bolt out of the blue. A divine intervention. A happy, fated event that paved the way for two painters to help each other with their work during an incredibly challenging time in our world’s history.’
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Stephen Ongpin Fine Art

Old Master, 19th Century and Modern Drawings, Watercolours and Oil Sketches

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