Richard Adams

There is an intersection where realistic landscape painting and abstraction meet and exchange ideas, one tells us in a literal way (realism) what we are seeing, the other (abstraction) invites us to imagine what we are seeing given a set of cues that can invoke perhaps a ‘landscape’ reading of the work. All of this has its parallels in music. These paintings, one could say, have a ‘musical’ feel to them, a rhythm, light and shade, arioso to capriccio.

Richard Adams has two strings to his bow. An artist who looks outwards for his painterly cues, and a musician (violinist with Nairobi Trio) who looks inwards for his music. This is conjecture of course, but talking to him one becomes aware of how one informs the other. There are two parts to this artist – painting that is in some way musical, and music that in some way painterly.

The act of creation, whichever art practice we happen to work within, is initially a solitary practice, but then, either by performing or by hanging the work on the wall, there comes the time of exposure, the reveal, the performance. Richard Adams has exhibited in New Zealand, London, Tokyo, and France and plays continuously throughout New Zealand and overseas.

available works

The Sea Suite oil and acrylic on canvas (tritych) 1220 x 2730mm $22,000