Click here to hear extended interview on YouTube
She fled communist Romania in 1980, arriving in Australia knowing no-one. But Aida Tomescu has gone on to become one of Australia's most important abstract painters.
She has exhibited in over 30 solo shows - including a major survey of her work in 2009 with the Drill Hall Gallery - and her work is held in many public and private collections both in Australia and internationally.
Tomescu has also won many awards including the Sulman, Wynne and Dobell prizes - but you get the impression that, although she appreciates that recognition, she doesn't see those awards as her greatest achievements. It became clear in our conversation that her primary aim is to convey meaning through her work and that appears to have been a lifetime pursuit.
We talk about her childhood in Romania, her arrival in Australia and the challenges she faced and how she quickly connected to the Australian art scene. Tomescu also explains what she calls 'found' colour, why she isn't chasing texture in her paintings and also gives some great advice for art students (which is also relevant for the rest of us!).
This episode has been edited for the podcast but a longer version can be heard on YouTube here.
Tomescu's show 'Under the Iron of the Moon' opens at Jensen gallery in Sydney on 19 October 2017 and we talk about the work in that exhibition as well as her beautiful Wynne finalist painting 'Bribie'. Images of all the works we talk about are posted below.
Upcoming Events
'Under the Iron of the Moon' at Jensen Gallery, Sydney, 19 October to 9 December, 2017
Links to things and people we talk about on the show
Aida Tomescu
Aida Tomescu at Jensen Gallery
Titian
Paul Cezanne
Gallery A, Sydney (1964 - 1983)
Piet Mondrian
Sulman Prize
Wynne Prize
Dobell Drawing Prize
Ian Fairweather
Camille Pisarro
Giorgio Morandi
Heide Museum of Modern Art
Jean-Paul Sartre
Extended Talking with Painters interview of Aida Tomescu on YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9D7B1W3cH3c
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