By Vivek Vadkar — Artist
As an artist, I often find myself contemplating the essential ingredients of creation. In the vibrant, sometimes dizzying, world of art—where Abstract Expressionism lives alongside Photorealism—there’s a common, often unacknowledged, truth: Every single art style, no matter how stylized or conceptual, is fundamentally based on realism.
This isn’t a critique of abstraction; it’s a celebration of the foundational knowledge that elevates all artistic expression.
When collectors invest in a piece of art, they are investing in the artist’s skill and vision. That skill, even for a non-representational artist, is forged in the understanding of the real world.
Realism is not just about drawing a perfect hand; it’s about training the eye to truly see. An artist who masters realism gains a deep, instinctive knowledge of:
Consider an artist like Picasso or van Gogh. Their genius wasn’t in failing to paint realistically; it was in choosing to manipulate reality for greater emotional impact.
The foundation in realism is the anchor that allows the artist to safely and effectively launch into non-realism. It grants the authority to distort, simplify, or abstract without losing the essential truth of the subject.
When you look at a piece of my work, whether it leans towards traditional figuration or explores abstract geometry, you are seeing the result of decades of studying the observable world.
The assurance that an artist can master the physical laws of light and form means that any subsequent deviation from those laws is intentional, informed, and deeply meaningful. It is the difference between a random splash of paint and a deliberate, skilled gesture.