TAY
STUDIO 5
OUT
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Style
When I returned to South Africa in 1995, a common general assumption towards abstract art was that, ‘beauty in art was simply a matter of not being so stylistically abstract.’ That was bad news for me.  At that time, realism as a genre was definitely king. Changing this narrow-minded attitude was my stirring challenge in life. I began to further refine my techniques and broaden my approach with colour, materials and experimentation on unconventional surfaces. Mostly things I found on my strange quest, like a window or an old piece of flooring.  After a year of building a body of work, I started pushing my art into galleries for more public reaction. 

  Style refers to the consistent qualities and features
that link my different works together.

  Viewers began looking beyond the abstract nature of my work and responded emotively to the expression the painting as a whole gave. This was the result I needed to move forward. People appreciated my use of colour and therefore, appreciated my abstract forms. In my opinion the key to beauty is colour, not just subject matter. Every painting has to have some colour, even if it is subtle. Colour became the pre-dominant and most recognizably exciting element to my unique painting style.

  Experimenting with combinations of colour, by building layer after layer onto the canvas or highlighting and enhancing certain elements within a work is what turns me on. The abstraction of elements allows me to be more imaginative; allowing a freedom of individualistic interpretation.

  There is absolutely no one way to describe my work.  It’s not what I paint that is important to me, but how I paint.  My style is what makes my art different from other artist’s and ultimately what makes my art worth collecting.  

Photography and Collage

Body Twister

 
Oil and Photographic Collage on Canvas
Collaborative work with
Ben Chowney

  Upon our initial contact with other humans, people label each other by how we physically look to each other upon meeting.  At these daily contacts we literally consciously and subconsciously evaluate body parts to get an answer and a feeling to carry on developing relationships with each other.  It is indeed subconscious stereotyping that is inherent in us as animals. The game of Body Twister illuminates the light hearted point that our reality of physical assumptions is futile when it comes down to predicting a winner of the game.  How did you score? In practice the work expresses that the body is beautiful, telling and stirring, and that it is how we play by the rules and accept the dichotomy of the outcome that determines our destinies.

TABE Body Twister Board
35cm x 35cm
TABE Body Parts Twister I
140cm x 140cm
TABE Body Parts Twister 2
140cm x 140cm
TABE 001
Tay's Lips
30cm x 30cm
SOLD

TABE 041
Factory
70cm x 70cm

TABE 043
Buses
70cm x 70cm
TABE 035
Love Everybody 1
120cm x 120cm
TABE 036
Love Everybody 2
120cm x 120cm

  
1222
It's a Sin
1500cm x 180cm

SOLD

It’s a Sin

This work addresses the stereotyped roles of women as partner, wife, mother, and nurturer. Not all women (including myself) are reluctant to perform these societal duties, but it can not be refuted that from being born as a female, society has already placed on woman the immense responsibility to conform to certain societal rules.  Some of these rules dictate how we dress and beautify ourselves, how we pursue an appropriate mate, who our mate is in terms of career and income, when to and how we marry our mate and ultimately how we propagate the human race by creating as many children we can afford with our mate.  Add a few rules of conduct from religious and family values and you have a woman’s role bound by such complexity of duty that it is almost impossible to commit some sort of social sin.  Of course one could abstain from these overbearing and impossible rules, but then there is risk of being stereotyped as a social deviant, a village outcast and what’s worse being placed under the label of ‘disgruntled feminist.’

Come Here Often?

 
In society, I believe that women are seen as sexual objects. In defense of men, it’s not always their fault that as sexual objects, a woman’s sexuality is misunderstood and therefore exploited and abused. Society, (both women and men) has willingly dictated the aesthetic standards of beauty and sex as can be seen through the multitudes of blatant stereotypes depicted in film, television, advertising, fashion design, cosmetics etc. The general thrust from society seeing a woman as an object of sexual submissiveness; is that an object can be bought, unwrapped and consumed.  However, one thing is apparent about the advancement of modern mankind when it comes to their objects, that if it doesn’t work, if it doesn’t meet expectations, if it breaks through misuse, you can always get a replacement as long as you still have the receipt.

1223
Come Here Often?
150cm x 180cm

517
Fission Self I
69cm x 128cm 
SOLD

Fission Self

This collection is about being a woman in the new South Africa.  The work focuses on stereotypes, forced roles and the barriers that exist for women, (sexually, intellectually, marriage and motherhood, etc.), in order to establish their own independence and determine their own destiny in a modern, male dominated society.  The cathartic effect is for both women and men to ‘let go of boundaries’, by not letting others stereotype you, developing your own voice and expression by not playing gender roles for the rest of your life.  To be free in a new democracy.  

518
Fission Self 2
69cm x 128cm 
SOLD
519
Fission Self 3
69cm x 128cm 
SOLD

Eggs
My early work experimentations dealt with surrealistic subjects in other worldly landscapes.  Subsequently, a lot of symbolic eggs appeared and stayed with my work for awhile. I was interested in the pure, simple and smoothness of the egg form which seemed so out of place when placed within a natural environment.   Symobolic of life, rebirth, and change my eggs stood alone and sterile in unrelated landscapes as if they came from somewhere else. The irony and contrast of the subject facinated me, so I painted a bunch of them.

click 
for more information
on the symbolism of the egg

134
Orange Egg Painting
26cm x 41cm 

171
Old World Egg Painting 2
60cm x 60cm 
108
Old World Egg Painting 1
74cm x 98cm 
STOLEN SOLD
209
Glass Silver Egg
27cm x 32cm 
SOLD

1512
The Arrival III
80cm x 80cm
SOLD

The Arrival Series

My whole process in the creation of these works is different to the way I usually work.  I masked over the underlying areas and what remained were the layers from before, in very definite shapes, unlike my other paintings in which I mask over certain areas, but with atmosphere, rather than the definitive shapes obvious in these works.  The result is far more definite. 

  In this experimental series, I worked with a focus on negative and positive, destroying areas or covering areas and creating or building other areas – the result being almost based on chance, but also through this discovery of sorts a very structural composition emerged. The painting technique, creates and illusion of  collage cut-outs instead of painted works.

  These paintings are about building and destroying, about trying to not be precious and breaking away from the organic qualities evident in many of my works.

  I see them more as an exercise in positive and negative truths than anything else.  They are about revealing and concealing, balance and structure, absence and presence.

1521
The Arrival VI
80cm x 45cm
1498
Blue Life
25cm x 35cm
SOLD SOLD
1513
The Arrival 4
60cm x 60cm
1514
The Arrival 5
56cm x 56cm
This Series of Triptychs were done as an experiment in working with oil paint on metal.  
Each works weighs 25 kilograms.

         

1125, 1126, 1127
African Pyramid Triptych
92cm x 61cm individually
ALL SOLD
         
1128, 1129 and 1130
Following the Sun Triptych
92cm x 61cm individually
ALL SOLD

Floors

The off-cut canvas on my studio floor gathers the droppings that fall from the paintings on my wall where I work.  These are preserved, in a sense, as a shadow, a footprint of what happens whilst I create. 

  In some ways my floors tell their own story.  The drops of paint falling on the floor form a testament of the colours I have been using in my art up to when I sign and date the floor piece. 

2053
Tay Floor Works 1
2007
170cm x 170cm

SOLD

1065
Orbit Floor Series
2003
190cm x 190cm
1066
Colour Floor Series
2003
170cm x 170cm
SOLD SOLD
1110
Slick 4th Floor Series III
100cm x 36cm
1070
1st Floor IV
2003
26cm x 44cm
Doors Windows Shutters

 

329
River Door 1888 - 1904 I
198cm x 54cm
330
River Door 1888 - 1904 II
198cm x 54cm
SOLD SOLD
230
Still Window
81cm x 86cm
351
Window 1888 - 1904
100cm x 102cm
SOLD SOLD
                                                 
496, 289 and 632
Seed Tablet Shutter II, Tablet Series 1888 - 1904 and The Division Shutter
87cm x 17cm, 88cm x 20cm and 136cm x 29cm
ALL SOLD

         

         
967 and 962 (STOLEN)
Old World Shutter II and Medieval Tablet
73cm x 17cm and 88cm x 23cm 
964 and 1410
The Whisper Tablet I and II
79cm x 22cm and 85cm x 18cm 
SOLD

Materials

 Primarily, most of my paintings are done with a variety of oil, enamel and acrylic paints on canvas or board.  I try not to limit my choice of materials to only conventional materials, solely because I believe strongly in the exploration and combination of different mediums. I also like to have fun once in a while, discovering new possibilities that various mediums have to offer.

  I often make use of, ink, pastel, pencil, mixed media and things that I have found.  This heightens the intensity and mystery of what I do. The contrasts within the various mediums I use, often creates a more dynamic work with many different qualities to it.

  The possibilities of materials are endless.  I may paint on, and in combination with, almost anything; canvas, paper, collage, wood, fabric, glass, metal, plastic, resin, rock, bone, whatever speaks to me at the time.  

596
Miniature Cross Woodblock
22cm x 22cm
SOLD
800
Miniature Woodblock 2
32cm x 27cm

567
Woodblock Collage
22cm x 22cm

SOLD SOLD

183.5
Small Woodblock
24cm x 38cm
110
Woodblock Series II
81cm x 34cm
SOLD

SOLD

1606
Immortalised
45cm x 31cm
278
New World Lost IV
50cm x 69cm
277
New World Lost III
44cm x 90cm
The Core of Africa
Installation
click to view exhibition

Earth Cores
Found in the Hottentots Holland Mountains
Western Cape, South Africa

Materials: Mixed Media and Oil Paint on Geological Cores - Table Mountain Sandstone, Granite, Shale and Quartzite - set in Crete Stone and Wood.

I have a secret passion for geology and it was impossible to ignore the possibilities of using these cores in my art.  I found them in a beautiful old abandoned building in the Hottentots Holland Mountain range near Cape Town. The building they were in had burnt down and the cores lay scattered all over the ground.  Forgotten years ago, their original purpose is a mystery to me, perhaps the “powers that be” were looking for gold or diamonds in the Cape!

Contrary to their original use, my rationale for embracing these cores artistically is the following: the Earth Cores, as portrayed through my personal vision, connect humanity with the changing pulse of the earth.  

Earth Core 
Installation
067
Earth Core 15
23.5cm x 23.5cm
083
Earth Core 83
23.5cm x 23.5cm
SOLD
082
Earth Core 82
23.5cm x 23.5cm
076
Earth Core 76
23.5cm x 23.5cm
SOLD SOLD
Earth Blocks
1545
Earth Block 1
23.5cm x 23.5cm
1546
Earth Block 2
23.5cm x 23.5cm
1550
 Earth Block 6
23.5cm x 23.5cm
1552
Earth Block 8
23.5cm x 23.5cm
SOLD SOLD

Looking Glass

 Many of these works are just fragments of pieces of my thoughts, little ideas and experiments that I collect and preserve.  The variety of genres and materials are what make them unique, even though they all belong to a single body of glass box works.  My ultimate aim is to strive for variety and individualism in each one of them.

The distortion of the work by reflection of light through the glass, gives the works a sense of movement and of being alive and changeable.  I

LG325
Looking Glass 325
23.5cm x 23.5cm
SOLD
LG285
Looking Glass 285
23.5cm x 23.5cm
LG265
Looking Glass 265
23.5cm x 23.5cm
SOLD SOLD

Tabe Smashed

These works question the notion of what art is.  The very fact that the glass itself is in fragments defies the notion that art should be displayed pristinely behind glass in a frame in the traditional manner of presentation.  The shattered glass also comments on the fragility of art.

 The broken-ness has its own beautiful, unpredictable quality of reflection that distorts and changes the work beneath.  In a sense, it heightens the movement as it reflects the work in different ways and changes what we see as we move in front of it.

 

TABE030
Smashed 21
63cm x 28cm
TABE017
Smashed 12
123cm x 70cm
TABE018
Smashed 13
95cm x 70cm
SOLD

Silver Japan

These works were a set of collages that I created out of shipping crate walls when I first moved to South Africa.  They are infact the very shipping crates that I moved all my things in from America.  

I used a lot of personal materials in the work like old sketches,  artifactual keepsakes, and some really interesting paper I used to collect.  Why throw away perfectly good thick card board surfaces right? 

These works marked the beginning of my pass time to collect junk as a source of materials for future works.

639
Silver Heart Japan
70cm x 100cm
SOLD
777
Silver Japan 2
80cm x 113cm
SOLD
608
Red Silver Japan I
88cm x 99cm
609
Red Silver Japan II
88cm x 99cm
SOLD SOLD
610
Blue Silver Japan
88cm x 99cm
SOLD

Plastic Promise

  The Plastic Promise Series initially originated out of my love for the play of light on different surfaces and my fascination with attempting to create a translucent effect in a painting.  The idea of a surface that could be manipulated in such a way that the work seems to have movement, sparked my interest.  As with my works in which I use glass, I wanted to create a series of works that has a life of their own.  As the natural light changes throughout the day and as the paintings are exposed to various forms of electric lighting, the work changes and seems to be a succession of different paintings throughout the day or night.

With the work “New Plastic Multi-dimensions”, I took this concept one step further.  The painting consists of a frame holding five different paintings, all painted separately.   Changing the order of the paintings in the frame or taking some out, changes the overall effect completely. 

  In a way, with this series, I succeeded in creating “living art”.  

1117 and 1118
Plastic Promise I and II
40cm x 90cm and 41cm x 60cm
1100
New Plastic Multi-dimensions
103cm x 63cm
Edge of Enamel

1000
Rosebud
200cm x 200cm
SOLD
1064
Movements In Time
140cm x 200cm
1011
Coda
200cm x 200cm
SOLD
1607
Fulcrum
120cm x 120cm

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