Evan Woodruffe - Paintings

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EW - S&R - 1st August (2024) 54 x 44 fr
EW - S&R - 6th August (2024) 54 x 44 fr
EW - S&R - 10th August (2024) 80 x 160
EW - S&R - 17th August (2024) 120 x 100 a
EW - S&R - 19th August (2024) 54 x 44 fr
EW - S&R - 22nd April (2024) 44 x 44 fr
EW - S&R - 23rd August (2024) 54 x 44 fr
EW - S&R - 24th August (2024) 54 x 44 fr
EW - S&R - 28th May (2024) 39 x 34 fr b
EW - S&R fr 3rd April 28 x 22 fr
EW - S&R fr 30th April 54 x 39
EW - Paintings - 30th August 2023
EW - Paintings - 25th August 2023
EW - Paintings - 21st June 2021
EW - Paintings - 21st August 2023
EW - Paintings - 11th August 2019 730 x 730
EW - Paintings - 8th August 2023
EW - S&R WC fr Heretanga June 2023 No. 1 280 x 290 x 36
EW - S&R WC fr Heretanga June 2023 No. 2 305 x 265 x 36 b
EW - S&R WC frEast Village NYC Jan 2024 325 x 265 x 36
EW - S&R WC 1 fr a

Evan Woodruffe was born in Tamaki Makaurau Auckland in 1965. While music was his first love, he started painting in the late 1990s and began exhibiting professionally in 2003. He completed an MFA (1st Class) at Elam University of Auckland in 2013, followed by a post-graduate degree in Art and Design from AUT in 2014.

“Most of our experience of the world is invisible – our thoughts, dreams, emotions; the way we move through life; and our relationships with others.” In his abstract paintings, which range from the tiny to the gargantuan, Woodruffe attempts to tease out this internal world, using colour to affect our emotions directly.

While painting remains the core of Woodruffe’s practice, his works have provided the imagery for printing onto fabrics, furniture, architecture, and automobiles (BMW, Sydney and Jaguar, Singapore). Through collaboration with designers and performers, he has extended his painting practice off the wall and into our 3D world.

Woodruffe has regularly shown at public institutions, which he says “provides opportunities to create something for a whole community”. The most recent include No Straight Lines, Hastings City Art Gallery (2023); Chengdu Biennale (2023); NZ Special Exhibition, 8th Beijing Biennale (2019); and The World is Porous, Tauranga Art Gallery (2018). He also shows in gallery exhibitions, as well as national and international art fairs and art projects.

A long-standing supporter of the visual arts, Woodruffe is also a collector, teacher and advocator. He has run Akepiro Street Studios, home to a dozen artists since 2008, and is a regular contributor to community events.