Monday - Friday: 8:30 - 18:00
artandframing@decorarts.com.sg
1 Corporation Drive, REVV West Enterprise Hub #07-18, Singapore 619775
Monday - Friday: 8:30 - 18:00
artandframing@decorarts.com.sg
1 Corporation Drive, REVV West Enterprise Hub #07-18, Singapore 619775
Tay Bak Koi’s limited edition art for sale “Landscape in Fantasy Idyllic Rural Life Scenes” are only available at decorarts.com.sg. A collection of 12 semi-abstract landscape prints by one of Singapore’s most sought-after artists, Tay Bak Koi. Lithographed on 250g high-quality stock, each print is a limited edition of 300 and has been numbered and hand-signed by the artist.
Tay Bak Koi, a renowned Singaporean artist, Born in Singapore, is known for his water colour, semi-abstract landscapes and powerfully portrayed pictures in oil A graduate of the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, he is among the most sought-after artists, not only in Singapore but in Australia, American, Europe and the Middle East.
Tay Bak Koi’s paintings are a permanent collection throughout the world including the Singapore National Museum Art Gallery in the palace of Sheik Isa Bin Rashed Al Kalfah. Bahrain, the ruler of Bahrain and in the Galloway Gallery in Brisbane. Tay Bak Ko’s works has also appeared in the Kuala Lumpur National Art Gallery, Singapore University Art Gallery, and galleries in Hong Kong Japan, Australa and Canada.
He has a way of combining fantasy and reality in a mixture of light, pastel colours which gives his pictures a serene and very soothing effect. Most of his paintings are one tone affairs, ging the picture har- mony in the final composition.
Bak Koi’s world is a fantasy landscape of barren boulders, dusters of trees where
quaint rural folk tend buffalo herds and fish in idylic repose.
During his 20 years since his first solo exhibition, Bak Koi has held 16 solo exhibitions and over 25 joint exhibitions in Singapore and
overseas
Tay Bak Koi’s paintings are unmistakably ‘his’. He has never lost his individuality. He creates an interesting texture to his water colour paintings with the use of rice paper with a crumping effect. He blurrs and blends distinct details softly into the background to create a semi- abstract fantasy and a sense of desolation.