A playful balance: Surrealism and realism

A new exhibition by Auckland artist Ross Jones opened this week at Parnell Gallery. A fusion of playful realism incorporating elements of the surreal, each meticulously devised painting offers hints at various narratives.

69 Line Honours, 2021

Ross Jones’ finely detailed works evoke a heady sense of nostalgia and elevated playfulness. Each painting has been conceptualised through the religious use of his sketchbook, drawing on a personal bank of photographs, objects, vintage toys, and memories collected since the artist was a boy. Immortalising his selected subjects through the act of painting, Jones’ indulgence in nostalgia is so easily shared as we find ourselves connected and lit up by a familiar object, a childhood memory, a scene, or even a time of day so faithfully depicted in his worlds that exude a balanced sense of whimsical reminiscence and intellectual musing. 

Jones is a story teller of sorts, an artist whose work has captured the imagination of many. Currently, he’s finishing his 75th painting, which will be the final piece for the upcoming Parnell Gallery exhibition, but his goal is to paint 25 more over the next six years to complete 100 works that together will be published in a book cataloguing the journey to date. 

71 The Captain, 2021

“My paintings are all about telling stories. They are a mixture of seemingly perfect places and events, but like all good stories not everything is as it seems. Shadows create just enough intrigue to tip the balance between the serene or mysterious scene.”

Working in oil on fine portrait linen, Ross creates large and mid-scale works known for their meticulously detailed bright and vivid scenes that connect with playful notions of juxtaposition and nostalgia.

Ross paints from his studio north of Auckland with the Hauraki Gulf literally lapping at his back door. Here, his tools and supplies are all laid out in their purposeful place. Around them, books, tin toys, lead soldiers and anything else that triggers his imagination also has its place.

66 Your Turn, 2020

The upcoming exhibition, on show from 8-22 November 2022 at Parnell Gallery, marks his third show with the gallery, where he exclusively exhibits biannually while showing works at selected galleries around New Zealand.

Latest video features

In the Coromandel, a home with a humble profile and a thoughtful design makes the most of a stunning location.

Built with awe-inspiring attention to detail, this Arrowtown home is a fresh interpretation of a familiar Otago rural vernacular.

This sculptural Northland bach is a perfect north arrow on a remote farm high above the sea.

With the sun on its bow and the community at its stern, this is a house in which the elements are always front of mind.

Trending articles

Design News

In frame

Designed by Jonas Trampedach in 2011 for FRAMA, the Rivet Series is crafted using a hand-hammered alternative to welding aluminium.

Design News

Intuitive simplicity

When it comes to home automation, a job well done is a job unseen. If you don’t notice it, and don’t need to interact with

Landscapes

Terracotta clad

Architect Tim Dorrington of Dorrington Atcheson Architects set out to produce something new: a prototype for pocket-sized houses envisioned as an alternative to large-scale developments.

Design News

Enduring character

Completed 10 years ago, and designed by architect Rich Naish of RTA Studio for his family, this home has settled effortlessly into its busy suburban