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Damian Elwes

Damian Elwes
Born Dusan Damian Cary Elwes
(1960-08-10) 10 August 1960 (age 56)
London, England
Residence Santa Monica, California
Citizenship British
Occupation Artist
Parent(s) Dominic Elwes
Tessa Kennedy
Website damianelwes.com

Damian Elwes (born 10 August 1960) is a British artist who lives and works in Santa Monica, California. His paintings explore themes such as the cycle of life, creativity and the connections between all living things. His artwork can be monumental and three-dimensional, such as a painting in which visitors walk from room to room on the ground floor of the "Villa La Californie "(2006), to witness the extent of Picasso's creativity in April 1956 or an immense landscape painting on the ground, "Amazon" (1999), on which visitors can walk above the flowering plants of a cloud forest and search for the source of the river.

Elwes was born in London into a family of artists. His grandfather and father were portrait painters. Both died when Damian was fifteen and left him easels and brushes. He was born to portrait-painter Dominic Elwes and interior designer and socialite Tessa Kennedy. His brothers are Cary Elwes, an actor, and Cassian Elwes, an independent film producer. His ability in Mathematics helped him gain a place at Harvard University. At graduation, his play writing professor gave him a palette knife that had once belonged to Henri Matisse. He went to Paris where, for two years, he made paintings of the studios of contemporary artists as a way to learn from them.

In the 1980s, Elwes lived in New York, where he was an early exponent of graffiti. In 1984 some of his first paintings were chosen by the eminent London art dealer, Robert Fraser, to be included in a graffiti exhibition with Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring.

His interest in ancient and contemporary methods of art making led him to spend time in Italy and Morocco. From 1992–2000, he lived, with his wife, Lewanne, in southern Colombia in a house and studio that he built overlooking a rain forest. There he created four "dream-sites", paintings so large that viewers can walk around inside them. A floor painting, "Fallen Tree" (1997) describes the cycle of life in one of the last surviving forests of mahogany. In a clearing in the forest, one old tree has fallen to the ground and is decaying. New saplings can be seen growing from the dead tree. This same cycle exists in painting and in all forms of innovation. So, while this work might be seen as a spur for conscience, it also contains an indication of Elwes' confidence in the power and continuity of creativity. In London, 2010, Damian Elwes exhibited an even larger floor painting about the origin of life. That artwork depicts a primary source of the Amazon River which exists at the summit of a Colombian volcano called Puracé. The painting was placed under plexiglass in the gallery and visitors could walk all over it. For the surrounding walls, Elwes created contemporary cave paintings of a woman asleep in that exotic ecosystem.


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