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PAUL CADDEN Hyperrealist Pencil Drawing Artist Gallery

Paul Cadden copies photographs in amazing detail, creating life-like images that appear deceptively real.

His realistic image even captures the way light reflects through the drops of water in mid-air.

Another of his works shows two men smoking on the street, with their faces so clear it is hard to believe the drawing is not a photograph.

A third image captures a nude woman reclining on a sheet, while a fourth picture shows a broken-down truck in the desert.

Paul's paintings usually measure 46.8ins x 33.1ins and take between three and six weeks to complete.

He produces around seven works per year, selling them for about £5,000 each.

Paul Cadden
Born: 1964, Glasgow, Scotland

Education:

1982-1986: Print Design and Illustration, Glasgow college of Building and Printing 
2001-2003: Animation and Illustration James Watt College

Paul is represented in London by Plus One Gallery:
For further information on prices, please contact  www.plusonegallery.com
89-91 Pimlico Road, London SW1 8PH – Tel: 020 7730 7656

Hyperrealism

"INTENSIFY THE NORMAL."

I think the creation of Art need not lead to alienation and can indeed be highly satisfying; one pours one's subjectivity into an object and one can even gain enjoyment from the fact that another in turn gains enjoyment from this. Although the drawings and paintings I make are based upon photographs, videos stills etc , the idea is to go beyond  the  photograph. The photo is used to create a subtler and much more complex focus on the subject depicted, The virtual image becomes the living image, an intensification of the normal. These objects and scenes in my drawings are meticulously detailed to create the illusion of a new reality not seen in in the original photo. The Hyperrealist style focuses much more on its emphasis on detail and the subjects depicted. Hyperreal paintings and sculptures are not strict interpretations of photographs, nor are they literal illustrations of a particular scene or subject. Instead, they utilise additional, often subtle, pictorial elements to create the illusion of a reality which in fact either does not exist or cannot be seen by the human eye. Furthermore, they may incorporate emotional, social, cultural and political thematic elements as an extension of the painted visual illusion; a distinct departure from the older and considerably more literal school of Photorealism.

 Realistic paintings by Paul Cadden7