The abstract painter and self-described ‘colourist’ takes special delight in playing with every shade of the rainbow.
In the Autumn issue of JONES Home, we celebrate how the artistic principles of colour, shape and texture can transform any space. Because, like a great piece of art on your wall, the homewares you use every day have the power to inspire and make home your always happy place.
“I’m interested in what resonates with the individual. What’s important is what makes one feel good and has a visceral effect.”
Miranda Skoczek
As such, we asked three experts – artists Otis Hope Carey, Louise Olsen and Miranda Skoczek – to bring their artful eye to every corner of your home. While Miranda Skoczek gravitates toward pink, no hue is off limits for the Melbourne-based painter in her work or home. She discusses her art collection, the intuitive nature of her work and using colour to bring vibrance to a space.
The colour edit
Have you always been creative?
Yes, indeed I have been. I always took great care in the way I would position things in my room, the colours I wanted to occupy it. I was forever drawing, cutting out little pictures and creating collages, collecting and pressing flowers, and looking to nature for inspiration. I had a very active imagination and I loved to draw the places I visited. Accompanying Mum to galleries, the theatre and ballet was an entry to a magical world.
When it comes to your creative process, at what stage does colour come in?
The birth of a new work happens so automatically – I’ve never planned a painting. I can literally start a new painting with the excess paint of a work that sits beside it, or from cleaning brushes off onto the canvas. The first laid colour informs the next colour to be used, and so on and so on. I have a theoretical understanding of colour, but I also employ its use decoratively.
Aside from painting, do you have other creative outlets?
Painting is a lifelong and all-consuming exercise and, except for necessary things like paying the bills and keeping my child alive, everything I do ultimately feeds into my practice as an artist. My everyday is an endless search and consumption of images, and my home is so intrinsically linked with my work. I’m a collector of myriad objects, books, art, tribal rugs, antiques and contemporary furniture.
“Start with a somewhat neutral palette, such as white and grey for walls, and large furniture and then bring colour in on top.”
Miranda Skoczek
What colours do you like to surround yourself with in the home?
Every colour of the rainbow and beyond! I do start with a somewhat neutral palette – with a grey sofa and, ideally, white walls – and then it’s a rather carnivalesque look on top. Art covers every inch of my walls. Pink and all of its manifestations speak to me the most. I find it so joyous and uplifting and am forever painting with it.
What art do you gravitate toward for your home?
My art collection ranges from old paintings my grandparents brought with them from Europe (my favourites being portraits of my mother and aunt) to contemporary art of my peers, and beautiful, modern paintings I’ve found on eBay. My Australian Indigenous works I treasure immensely, and I always wish to add more folk art to my collection.
Photography by Oly Begg; Styling by Claudia Jukic; Interview by Elle McClure
Want to hear more from our expert Tastemakers? Watch along as Miranda gives an insight into her inspiration and process, below. Then read as artist and Dinosaur Designs co-founder Louise Olsen lends her expertise to using shape as a decorating tool, while painter and surfer Otis Carey talks to texture, both in art and in the home.