Robert Marchessault

Works
  • Robert Marchessault, Alaamara, 2023
    Alaamara, 2023
    60 x 80 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Alizriana, 2025
    Alizriana, 2025
    48 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Arbre Al Mar, 2021
    Arbre Al Mar, 2021
    44 x 44 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Cap Ferrat, 2025
    Cap Ferrat, 2025
    56 x 44 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Cloud Indigo, 2021
    Cloud Indigo, 2021
    60 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Empress Garden II, 2025
    Empress Garden II, 2025
    40 x 40 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Fjord du Saguenay, 2021
    Fjord du Saguenay, 2021
    36 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Kaian, 2014
    Kaian, 2014
    37 1/2 x 57 1/2 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Lagoa, 2022
    Lagoa, 2022
    48 x 44 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Lakken, 2025
    Lakken, 2025
    24 x 24 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Loropetalum, 2024
    Loropetalum, 2024
    36 x 40 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Maha Winds, 2025
    Maha Winds, 2025
    36 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Mangrove II, 2021
    Mangrove II, 2021
    54 x 44 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Muskokan, 2021
    Muskokan, 2021
    24 x 24 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, New Tong, 2022
    New Tong, 2022
    68 x 60 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Omori Omori, 2021
    Omori Omori, 2021
    48 x 42 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Pelican Point, 2024
    Pelican Point, 2024
    44 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Resistencia, 2025
    Resistencia, 2025
    48 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Rosy Dawn, 2024
    Rosy Dawn, 2024
    40 x 40 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Salix, 2018
    Salix, 2018
    64 x 54 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Saltito II, 2021
    Saltito II, 2021
    30 x 30 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Seiano, 2025
    Seiano, 2025
    24 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, South Dunes, 2023
    South Dunes, 2023
    36 x 74 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, South Point, 2023
    South Point, 2023
    22 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, The Bacchae, 2022
    The Bacchae, 2022
    48 x 44 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, TiVert, 2023
    TiVert, 2023
    24 x 24 in.
    Reserved
  • Robert Marchessault, Tolani, 2021
    Tolani, 2021
    60 x 40 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Too Far From You, 2023
    Too Far From You, 2023
    28 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Trachili, 2021
    Trachili, 2021
    40 x 40 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Tre Gambe, 2023
    Tre Gambe, 2023
    44 x 44 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Triska, 2025
    Triska, 2025
    40 x 90 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Umi III, 2017
    Umi III, 2017
    24 x 24 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Un Calme Verdoyant, 2023
    Un Calme Verdoyant, 2023
    24 x 24 in.
    Reserved
  • Robert Marchessault, Varnaskil Spring, 2005
    Varnaskil Spring, 2005
    24 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Willow in Cool Air, 2024
    Willow in Cool Air, 2024
    40 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Windigo, 2024
    Windigo, 2024
    64 x 64 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Windjam II, 2021
    Windjam II, 2021
    24 x 60 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Woburn Highland, 2022
    Woburn Highland, 2022
    24 x 48 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Yerba, 2021
    Yerba, 2021
    54 x 44 in.
  • Robert Marchessault, Yoshi, 2021
    Yoshi, 2021
    60 x 48 in.
Overview
"Painted images act as a tool. I respond to the spaces my art suggests. That response is usually non-verbal. I am interested in the experience of non-duality that “getting lost” in big spaces can sometimes produce for me."

"My painting is an inquiry. I make images as a way of responding to experiences that are important to me. Experiences that help me to understand why I’m in this world often happen when I am outside in large open spaces.

 

Painted images act as a tool. I respond to the spaces my art suggests. That response is usually non-verbal. I am interested in the experience of non-duality that “getting lost” in big spaces can sometimes produce for me. The paintings have gone through a range of artistic treatments with the recent years seeing a focus on space, light, textures, atmosphere and distance.

 

My landscape paintings are made from memory, not from on-site drawings or photographs. I use memory as a filtering agent to remove non-essential visual elements. When a work is successful, it must have a sense of poetry.

 

There is nothing “new” about the way I make art. Jean Baudrillard (one of the gurus of the new ‘Postmodern’ ethos) has said that in the sphere of art, every practice has exhausted itself, and that all an artist can do is “to recombine and play with the forms already produced.” (Steven Best & Douglas Kellner, Postmodern Theory: Critical Interrogations. New York: The Guilford Press, NY., 1991, 128.) With this in mind, I do not seek to make art that is “new”. My art accepts the visual devices handed down to painters and strives to use those as an investigative tool. The “new” that I hope will happen is a new association, understanding or experience for a viewer."

 

- Robert Marchessault