Suspended between worlds, Kyara van Meel’s paintings are grounded in the materiality of nature yet border on the limitless realms of the imagination.
The artist’s ability to intertwine contrasting elements – micro and macro, light and dark, form and ephemerality – bestows her work with an elusive and dreamlike quality. Inspired by romantic landscapes, botanical structures and childhood memories, her canvases evoke a sense of wonder. Her soft, rounded shapes are drawn from plants and fruits while also hinting at the curves of the human body, suggesting an intimate interconnectedness between different life forms. Diffuse layers of oil paint seem to unfurl slowly across time and space, building into textured worlds where light seeps through arch-like spaces, offering a glimpse into the beyond.
Kyara van Meel
Untitled
2024
120 x 95 cm
Kyara van Meel
Untitled
2024
100 x 130 cm
Kyara van Meel
Untitled
2024
175 x 130 cm
Kyara van Meel
Untitled
2024
85 x 70 cm
Kyara van Meel
Untitled
2024
140 x 130 cm
Kyara van Meel
Untitled
2024
150 x 180 cm
In her charcoal wall drawings, van Meel harnesses the symmetrical and synchronised movements of both arms in an embodied form of automatic drawing.
Standing in a single spot close to the wall, the artist is unable to form a judgement of the overall composition as it progresses. “During this process, my presence merges onto the wall as it shows my traces,” van Meel says. She aims to achieve a mental state of unboundedness or being at one with the world, while also extending her paintings into the spaces around them to create a sense of immersion. Echoing the way nature reclaims and transforms its surroundings, the spiralling charcoal lines suggest plants growing over man-made structures, roots breaching concrete, or vines weaving through wall cracks.
The artist finds inspiration in Romantic landscapes, which are reflected in the broad outlines of her underlying compositional structures.
She is particularly interested in the distribution of light and dark, high contrast and tight structures that give these landscape paintings such impact. Building up layer by layer, she superimposes this macro view with a close-up exploration of micro structures, such as those found in fruit or leaves. As a city-dweller, van Meel’s botanical knowledge is usually sourced from books, which have helped inform her practice.
She cites Jennifer Higgie’s book The Other Side as a touchstone for finding kinship within a lineage of women abstract artists who were interested in spiritualism and the interconnections between life forms. In particular, she relates to Hilma af Klint’s spiritual approach to biomorphic forms and Georgia O’Keeffe’s visual linkages between fruits or flowers and the female body.
Van Meel’s colour palette, characterised by sunlit yellow, forest greens and ocean blues, draws from her early education steeped in nature studies. Her colours evoke a sense of organic growth, where each hue responds to the others in visual harmony.
“My grandpa was an artist too and he taught me to find the lightest point in paintings, to see how it reflects on other aspects,” she explains. “Often I can find a rhythm in colour use. I have a preference for colour and light coming together, responding to each other throughout the whole painting to create an atmospheric image.” There’s a meditative streak to van Meel’s process, a trust in the unfolding of each piece without the weight of a predetermined outcome. The works, like the artist herself, seem to embrace the uncertainty of becoming. They invite us to linger, to enter a space where we might lose and rediscover ourselves in the layers of light and shadow.
Biography
Kyara van Meel (b. 1999) is a Dutch artist whose practice explores the connections between micro and macro worlds through kaleidoscopic oil paintings and charcoal drawings. Her paintings intertwine imagery of plants, fruits and Romantic landscapes, using strong contrasts of light and shadows to create fluid and dynamic abstract compositions. The artist holds a Bachelor’s degree from the Royal Academy of Art and a Master’s degree from the Frank Mohr institute. Her work has been exhibited at Rotterdam Art Week (2022); Cycle, Portal, Path, Nest, The Hague (2023); and I Paint Outside the Lines, Candid House Projects, London (2023). In 2024, she was featured as a finalist for the Buning Brongers Prize and participated in the group exhibition The Young Ones at Franzis Engels, Amsterdam.
Chosen Charity
War Child UK
War Child UK protects, educates and advocates for the rights of children affected by war worldwide, including in Gaza and Lebanon. The organisation is driven by their goal to ensure a safe future for every child living through war, helping them to heal and learn. When conflict breaks out, they aim to reach children as early as possible and stay on to support them long after the cameras have gone home.