

Many generations of artists have looked into the mysteries offered by spiritual writings and belief systems. At the end of the 19th century interest in mysticism fused with the genesis of abstract painting. An astonishingly high proportion of artists working since then have been involved with these ideas and their art reflects a desire to express spiritual, metaphysical ideals that cannot be necessarily expressed in traditional pictorial terms. Armando Alemdar Ara’s art fits in this category but one is faced with a considerable difficulty when trying to pinpoint any visual influences on his art.
It is the writings of Plotinus, who is arguably the first mystical thinker in Western philosophy, that have affected Armando’s esoteric belief that visible forms occur at the lower stages in the material world and are but a distraction on the path to Truth. The insistence that true reality must be free from recognisable (visible) forms is indeed a theme that recurs time and time again in later mystical tradition. Armando does exactly this in his painting: he reduces the importance of recognisable form allowing ‘higher’, abstract form to come through. In this exhibition Armando aims to represent inner experiences of a spiritual reality behind but not beyond corporeal forms. The beautiful is produced by an inner need that springs directly from the soul.
We need time to observe Armando’s art. As we do so, slowly the paintings unravel a little more. Numerous layers over layers of paint reveal but at times conceal the forms. Inspired by Leonardo da Vinci, at times Armando presents us with figures that are androgynous, they can be either male or female.
Armando pictures are visual statements of thoughtful and creative imagination, but also of deep reflection into the true nature of reality and the presence of Spirit. A sensation of depth prevails in Armando’s pictures; a spiritual depth, as well as artistic depth. As opposed to the total abstraction that artists such as Piet Mondrian, Wassily Kandinsky achieved by gradual simplification and dematerialisation of form, Armando’s abstraction never really disposes of physical form altogether. This is firstly because of Armando’s essentially Renaissance belief that the human figure is ‘a measure for all things’. Perhaps one of the most remarkable qualities of Armando’s paintings, apart from the impressive usage of colour glazes, is the achievement of harmony between dynamics and tranquillity.
After revisiting the more figurative for the past few years, in Transcendence Armando has returned to somewhat more abstract work, while maintaining a parallel continuity between abstract and figurative elements, the two always evolving around each other, born onto one another in a constant play of inner and outer. In the finished picture we can sense the perpetual metamorphoses of the human figure and its energy.
ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA
Allusions, 2022

Oil on linen
101 x 76 cm





ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA
Hope, 2023
Oil on linen

90 x 84 cm

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA

Hope, 2023
Giclee Print on watercolour paper. Limited edition of 10 signed and numbered by the artists 60 x 56 cm

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA

JobTranscending, 2009

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA

JobTranscending, 2009
Giclee Print on watercolour paper. Limited edition of 10 signed and numbered by the artists 60 x 42 cm

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA
Prayer, 2023

Oil on linen
51 x 35 cm

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA
Searching, 2023

Pen on Watercolour paper 72 x 56 cm

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA
Searching, 2023

Giclée print on watercolour paper. Limited edition of 10 signed and numbered by the artists 29 x 21 cm

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA
Searching-DiptychModello , 2023

oil sketch on linen 60 x 44 cm



ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA

Transcendence, 2023
walnut ink and wash on watercolour paper 72 x 56 cm

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA
Transcendence, 2023
Oil on linen

158 x 90 cm

ARMANDO ALEMDAR ARA Transcendence, 2023
Giclee Print on watercolour paper. Limited edition of 10 signed and numbered by the artists 60 x 42 cm


