Artists

David Freeman (1961–)

David Freeman was born in Calcutta, India, in 1961 and moved to Britain in 1978. After graduating college in 1981, he set up his own studio in London.

For the next several years, he busied himself on commissions for books, magazines, posters and greeting cards; at the same time he continued with his own fine artwork, exploring various mediums, including sculpture. Eventually he came full circle to return to the subject that had always been his favorite occupation, painting of the human figure. The treatment of his subjects shows a deep understanding of the classical realist tradition. His interplay of light and darkness is a modern version of the Baroque use of Rembrandt and Caravaggio’s "Chiaroscuro." His figures and faces have a luminescence found in the works of the late Italian Renaissance masters. The skin tones that he paints are iridescent as in the works of Tintoretto.

The high level of detail with which Freeman paints highlights the “icon-like” appearance of his figures. They are blended into his myriad of patterned backgrounds as if frozen in time. His colors, deeply rich, dark and sumptuous, and his frequent use of gold leaf are derived from the Byzantine tradition of decoration. Despite Freeman's classical approach, his faces and figures speak to the viewer from a standpoint in the vanguard of art of the late twentieth century figurative style.

View Pieces by David Freeman