Creating a Brandhoek Series: From First Mood to Final Edition
The development of a Brandhoek series begins long before the first animal enters the composition. It starts not with a figure, but with an atmosphere.
Jane Adams
The development of a Brandhoek series begins long before the first animal enters the composition. It starts not with a figure or motif, but with an atmosphere. A feeling that slowly condenses and seeks visual expression.
Architecture of Visual Spaces
Brand Mewis approaches his compositions like an architect. The rooms are created orthographically, without vanishing lines, without perspective distortion. This technique gives the works their characteristic timelessness – a visual language that consciously turns away from the conventions of classical perspective painting and instead enables an equal dialogue of all visual elements.
Choosing the Right Animal
Which animals are featured in a series is decided by Brandhoek not for aesthetic reasons, but for thematic ones. Every otter, falcon, or wolf brings its own kind of calm, presence, and depth. The cult animals embody archaic symbolism, while the horse series recalls the connection between humans and animals through the millennia.
The Compositional Phase
When the mood and the animal fit together, the compositional phase begins. It is meticulous and detail-oriented. Every line, every shadow is carefully placed until the image achieves that distinctive balance that makes Brandhoek works so remarkable – a tension between calm and presence, between the familiar and the wild.
The Brandhoek Moment
Thus, from an idea emerges a space, from a space a series, and from a series a world. Many collectors speak of the Brandhoek moment – that instant when the work completely captures the viewer and draws them into its quiet, magical atmosphere.
Jane Adams
Creative Director and art journalist based in Manchester. Reporting on new trends in African and international visual arts.