Contagion, 2021
Caia Matheson
Oil and dyes on canvas
Original Painting, 20 x 20 x 4 cm
Caia Matheson Art
About Caia Matheson
Caia Matheson is an award-winning contemporary oil painter based in East Sussex, UK. She was born in Johannesburg and educated in Tokyo and London. She has exhibited widely in the UK as well as internationally and has been shortlisted for numerous awards, including winning Brighton Artist of the Year in 2004. Moreover, she painted Europe's first Rainbow Pedestrian Crossing Brighton in 2014, and in 2013 her work was selected by author Neil Gaiman for the book "A Calendar of Tales".
For Matheson, painting is a very physical process. She loves to mix paint mediums and experiment with the effects. This, for her, can be the most exciting part of the creative process. Her mediums are oils – tubes of oil paint, oil bars, oil pastels and mixtures of oil paints and dyes. She enjoys the texture consistency and smells of them. She paints with her hands and washing-up sponges onto canvases laid flat on the floor, building and scratching off layers of oil paint to create a world within worlds.
The layers are designed in a way to expose different subjects of the composition. These subjects are buried in the dark and light spaces and come out and disappear as the light changes presenting different aspects depending on shifting light conditions and mood.
Her work is about words and verse from all sources such as radio plays audiobooks stories, song lyrics and poetry. She gets such great pictures from words and translate them into her work as a visual narrative.
The painting begins with a specific colour that she has in her mind's eye. She then introduces other colours and begins to build layers on the canvas. These layers are then scratched off and layered over again like a palimpsest literally meaning 'scraped clean and used again'. She loves the idea of previous markings that are not visible but are still an inherent part of the composition. For her, each successive layer is a generation to populate or depopulate the canvas as needed and create her own world as she goes. She likes to create a world within worlds.
As a kid, she used to be fascinated by the Lowly worm in the Richard Scarry books. She loved scouring each page to seek out that worm, and when she found it, she would feel most content like she had discovered a piece of secret truth that would uncover all the answers to her questions about the universe. There are some Lowly worms in her abstracts, albeit in symbolic form.
Matheson is inspired by wabi-sabi or the beauty of imperfection.