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JJ Manford — Matissian Fireside Deconstruction
JJ Manford

Matissian Fireside Deconstruction

2026

A cascade of fractured interior warmth animates JJ Manford's "Matissian Fireside Deconstruction," a compact yet commanding canvas in which oil pastel and Flashe paint collide to produce surfaces of remarkable chromatic tension. Manford works within a recognizable lineage of pattern-driven figuration, drawing openly on Matisse's decorative syntax while dismantling it through a contemporary sensibility attuned to ambiguity and psychological charge. The fireside setting dissolves into competing geometries, with domestic comfort rendered unstable by bold, competing fields of color and line that refuse easy resolution. At just 65 by 50 centimeters, the work concentrates considerable pictorial energy into an intimate format, rewarding close attention with layered passages of mark-making that shift between opacity and translucency. The material combination is central to Manford's practice and to this work's particular appeal. Flashe, a vinyl-based matte paint with a history rooted in commercial application, introduces a flatness that sits in productive dialogue with the waxy, tactile qualities of oil pastel, and Manford exploits this contrast to create spatial ambiguity, areas that simultaneously advance and recede. The result is a painting that feels both immediate and considered, improvised in gesture yet deliberate in structure. Signed by the artist and currently presented through Rolando Anselmi, this work represents a strong entry point into Manford's evolving body of work for collectors seeking paintings that engage seriously with art historical inheritance while maintaining a distinctly contemporary edge.

Medium
Oil pastel and Flashe on canvas
Overall
Signed
Yes
Location
Rolando Anselmi, Rome

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About this work

JJ Manford, Matissian Fireside Deconstruction, 2026

A cascade of fractured interior warmth animates JJ Manford's "Matissian Fireside Deconstruction," a compact yet commanding canvas in which oil pastel and Flashe paint collide to produce surfaces of remarkable chromatic tension. Manford works within a recognizable lineage of pattern-driven figuration, drawing openly on Matisse's decorative syntax while dismantling it through a contemporary sensibility attuned to ambiguity and psychological charge. The fireside setting dissolves into competing geometries, with domestic comfort rendered unstable by bold, competing fields of color and line that refuse easy resolution. At just 65 by 50 centimeters, the work concentrates considerable pictorial energy into an intimate format, rewarding close attention with layered passages of mark-making that shift between opacity and translucency. The material combination is central to Manford's practice and to this work's particular appeal. Flashe, a vinyl-based matte paint with a history rooted in commercial application, introduces a flatness that sits in productive dialogue with the waxy, tactile qualities of oil pastel, and Manford exploits this contrast to create spatial ambiguity, areas that simultaneously advance and recede. The result is a painting that feels both immediate and considered, improvised in gesture yet deliberate in structure. Signed by the artist and currently presented through Rolando Anselmi, this work represents a strong entry point into Manford's evolving body of work for collectors seeking paintings that engage seriously with art historical inheritance while maintaining a distinctly contemporary edge.

Medium
Oil pastel and Flashe on canvas
Dimensions
overall: 65 x 50 cm
Year
2026
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Rolando Anselmi, Rome

More works by JJ Manford

Collected by

Gavin Kennedy