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Bliss, from Eccentric Moments Collection, 2019 | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Rod McIntosh | Bankside Hotel, Autograph Collection in London. Item composed of wood and paper
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Bliss, from Eccentric Moments Collection, 2019 | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Rod McIntosh | Bankside Hotel, Autograph Collection in London. Item composed of wood and paper
Bliss, from Eccentric Moments Collection, 2019 | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Rod McIntosh | Bankside Hotel, Autograph Collection in London. Item composed of wood and paper

Created and Sold by Rod McIntosh

Rod McIntosh

Bliss, from Eccentric Moments Collection, 2019 - Paintings

Featured In Bankside Hotel, Autograph Collection, London, United Kingdom

Price from $1,200 to $6,000

Creation: 6-8 weeks

Ink on Chinese mulberry paper, mounted to Fabriano cartridge (120gsm) substrate on birch panel, gesso, matte varnish. 24 carat gold leaf over terracotta bole underpainting.

100cm diameter can be completed to any size desired.

Price range is dependent on scale of work, whether mounted to wood, canvas or paper. Prices quoted are for work only. I can quote for framing using a preferred UK supplier. Crating and shipping not included.

Item Bliss, from Eccentric Moments Collection, 2019
Created by Rod McIntosh
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Rod McIntosh
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2019
Monochrome ink paintings. Created through mindful movement and the observation of the breath.

Rod McIntosh is an artist with his studio in the midst of the English countryside of rural Kent. He works between Kent and London as an exhibiting artist and is represented by several galleries and consultants working together to build a national and international profile for his work.

He studied figurative sculpture in Sheffield, graduating in 1992. He maintained a dynamic practice alongside a successful Arts Management and academic career until 2009. When he returned full-time to the studio.

His current work as a mark-maker lies within the tradition of drawing. With his body, the breath along with materials, and repetitive often-obsessive processes focus attention to the present. Observing and recording the moment of creation within a continuum.

He speaks of them as;

“Physical meditations, that offers himself, and the viewer, a moment to pause.”