“My subjects are
always people in an urban kind of environment”
RaQuel van Haver
RaQuel van Haver
The Columbian born artist RaQuel van Haver was nine months
old when she was adopted by a Dutch couple and along with her Sri Lankan sister
grew up in Amsterdam. Her interest in art was sparked by the time she spent
with her grandparents.
As she explained to Amsterdam 2.0 “Because
my parents were both working we spent a lot of time with our grandparents. My
grandfather was an artist, so that is how I got acquainted with art. I used to
spend a lot of time in his studio and he would give me all sorts of pencils,
paint and crayons and shit to draw and play with.”
After gaining her BFA from
the Hoge School voor Kunsten Utrecht van Haver embarked upon her career
as a figurative painter producing works that have the need/search for identity
as a central issue.
As she has said “Everyone you
meet in Amsterdam, no matter where they’re from, they’re always searching for
something. There are all sorts of people in this city with all sorts of ideas
but in some way, because of the environment, these ideas really connect and
come together. Everybody’s open minded and accepting. And I really miss that
sometimes in other cities.”
Mostly working on a large
scale with oil paints made to her own recipe, van Haver collages her sketches
with photographs to make non-existent, fragment interpretations of the real world.
As she says in her artist’s statement
“She rearranges reality and our perception by confront[ing] the viewer with
their own identity (the identity of the beholder) and the identity of the
Other, the other person.
Van Haver elaborates, stating
“these people are people from all strata of society put together, and I’m
interested in how they interact…I’m very curious as of how these people
collaborate in an urban environment.”
Her debut exhibition in
England RaQuel van Haver: Metro 54
is current on show at London’s Jack Bell Gallery
until the 3rd of July.
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