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Biography | Portfolio
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Mark King, a champion of Impressionism and the Ecole de Paris, was born
in Bombay in 1931 of British parents. He is the product of an exotic and privileged upbringing
in India, where he lived until the age of sixteen during the tumultuous last days of the
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British
Raj. In 1948, following graduation from La Martiniere College in Calcutta, where his focus had
been on botany as well as art, King sailed to England to attend Bournemouth College of Art,
having determined to pursue painting, sculpture, architecture and theatre design. He subsequently
spent the next ten years as resident scenic designer at the Oxford Playhouse Theatre, the Bristol
Old Vic Theatre and the Scottish National Opera.
In 1961 King decided to concentrate on painting
and moved to Paris to study at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and the Louvre. King has carefully
studied the old and modern masters from Cimabue and Masaccio to Goya, Turner, Degas and Bonnard.
Fascinated with painting techniques, the chemical composition of colors and how they interact,
King admits, "What I am searching for is not so much making a statement, or coming up with
something new or different, but having more virtuoso command of my medium.
Preparing the
foundation consumes most of his time, for King meticulously layers colors, glazes and shapes as
substrata for the five or ten percent of the acrylic paint that floats on top and forms the
finished composition. The underpainting filters through to the surface creating depth and texture.
Because of his alla prima approach, in which a painting is realized in a burst of inspiration and
single application of pigments, King confesses, "It is not until the last ten to fifteen minutes
before completion that I am able to see where the painting is going and catch the mood of the moment."
King's versatility and zest for life transform everything he paints into strong patterns of brilliant
color. His subtle understanding of how color, texture and paint interact is his strength. Color
conveys feelings and emotions in the creation of a timeless art. |