Petra Meikle de Vlas's work in a styled room
Petra Meikle de Vlas portrait
Artist

Petra Meikle de Vlas

Each work is a study in chemistry and gravity, where pigments attract and repel to form the likeness of the sea.

204 Works

About Petra

Petra receives 20% of every sale

Transparent compensation, always.

Petra Meikle de Vlas operates from a coastal studio situated 15 nautical miles from the Great Barrier Reef. Her practice is a direct dialogue with the surrounding waters, where she rejects conventional methods in favor of experimental techniques that mimic the natural world. By layering materials on large-format boards, she "sculpts" her paintings to capture the intricate formations of the reef and the movement of the ocean. The artist utilizes an array of tools—including air guns, blowtorches, and gravity—to simulate environmental forces. In her process, liquid paint represents water, while the heat of a torch acts as the sun and the tilt of the board mirrors the tide. This focus on the chemistry between pigments results in dynamic compositions where materials attract and repel, building deep, multi-layered textures.

Visual voice

Her aesthetic is defined by organic, sculptural textures and fluid compositions that mirror aerial reef views and oceanic depths. The work emphasizes the physical interaction of media, using chemical reactions and elemental forces to create complex, layered formations on a large scale.
Oceanic FormationsSculptural Mixed MediaLarge FormatElemental TechniquesTextural Abstraction
Good to know

Petra Meikle de Vlas — questions answered

What inspired Petra Meikle de Vlas's artistic style?

Her work is deeply influenced by the waters surrounding her coastal studio, located near the Great Barrier Reef.

What tools does the artist use instead of traditional brushes?

She employs air guns, spray bottles, blowtorches, and her hands, often using gravity to guide the paint across the board.

How does she achieve the unique textures in her paintings?

She "sculpts" her work by layering various materials on a board, allowing pigments to react chemically and form reef-like structures.

What role does nature play in her creative process?

She treats her tools as forces of nature: the spray bottle acts as rain, the hairdryer as wind, the blowtorch as the sun, and gravity as the tide.

Are the works typically small or large?

Petra typically works in large formats to accommodate the multi-layered, poured-paint compositions and dynamic chemical reactions.

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