
Born – Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 1965
Piano Performance – Royal Conservatory, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 1987
BA – McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 1984-1987
Juris Doctorate – Whittier College – Los Angeles, California, 1987-1991
Comparative Law – University of Florence – Florence, Italy, 1990
Peter Burega, in his newest work The Bright Waters Series and Divided Skies, has begun to re-discover and explore the landscape. His works are beautiful missives of oil on panel. Mercurial by nature and obsessed with process, he turns out increasingly thoughtful, wildly expressive, and ultimately sophisticated paintings. “Although my work is abstract, it develops from my experience and interaction with the land. Moments taken from daily life, dreams, experiences, and visual impressions. Studies of my environment - light, shadow, reflection – conspire to inform my work.”
While he still experiments with the contradictions of geometry and the abstract landscape, a new kind of discovery has occurred in his work. It reflects the harmony and conflict that are found in the play of light on water or in the marching of cloud shadows along a mesa: infusing a new level of subtlety in his work. There is a message among the Sioux Indians that gives perspective to Burega’s paintings. It influences how he approaches both his life and work: ‘I would live where the sky is open, where the fences are not, and where the spirit walks the earth.”
As in his past work, Burega’s goal is that every individual take their own message from his paintings. “Although I would like the viewer to experience the volume of motion and light that occurs in a piece, I still strive to have the them bring their own interpretation to the stories I tell about the places I have been,” explains Burega.
Possessed of an admittedly “percussive” brain, Burega admits to having had an unusual development as an artist. He is self-taught. While living in Los Angeles working as an attorney Burega started painting after experiencing Mexican painter Victor Hugo Zayas’ work. Obsessed with the notions of abstract landscape and Zayas’ interpretation of abstract expressionism Burega started on his path. He started out working on masonite, then canvas, followed by paper and door-skin. Finally, he tried board.
Burega’s work possesses both a rigidity coupled with a supple, lushness of surface. He paints only with trowels, scrapers and knives. He seldom picks up a paintbrush except to finish or glaze a surface. Painting with oils and many layers of varnish, his first layers of under-painting serve to cure the. While layering, the composition of his work emerges. Both the removal and addition of layers serve to give Burega’s work a certain luminosity. This tends to bring an additional burnished element to the work. He also scores his panels with a knife whish allows for the juxtaposition of color fields and compositional elements. This methodology also provides an opportunity for Burega to change perspective within a single piece.
“Subconsciously, you know, there’s stuff going on behind the scenes, Burega reveals. “Although I tend to know what’s back there—sometimes I don’t remember and this leads to my being surprised when I remove layers. Somehow my process has developed a plan of which I am not always aware.”
Approaching each painting as a kind of geometrical equation to be solved or played with, Burega constructs an asymmetric grid on which to begin painting. This grid is as important to him as his subject matter.
Recently, while spending time in the lush, dense climes of the British Virgin Islands, Burega’s work underwent a dramatic change in palette and light. “In the Caribbean, light flickers differently than anywhere else on earth and that affected my changing perspectives.”
Hoping to give people a peek into how it is he sees the world, and how he thinks—and how he processes what he sees—Burega has left behind the world of beauty and gone inside his head. “I have a very pleasing palette but that’s not what drives me,” says Burega. “My work is much more thoughtful. I used to be extremely visceral. I’m more focused now—it’s more me. I’m very right brain left brain: I am able to maintain a contradictory organization: completely letting go while functioning within a planned process.”
That juxtaposition is where Burega’s paintings emerge.
ONE MAN SHOWS AND EXHIBITIONS
Meyer East Fine Art |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – August, 2009 |
Bennett Street Gallery |
Atlanta, Georgia – February, 2009 |
Meyer East Fine Art |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – October, 2008 |
Coda Gallery |
New York, New York – April, 2008 |
Coda Gallery |
Palm Desert, California – February, 2008 |
Bennett Street Gallery |
Atlanta, Georgia – November 2007 |
Gallery 225 |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – October 2007 |
Coda Gallery |
New York, New York – April 2007 |
Mulry Fine Art |
Palm Beach Florida – February 2007 |
Art Basel |
Miami, Florida – January 2007 |
Palm Beach 3 |
Palm Beach, Florida – January 2007 |
Ventana Fine Art |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – October 2006 |
Coda Gallery |
New York, New York – May 2006 |
Coda Gallery |
Palm Desert, California – March 2006 |
Palm Beach Art Fair |
Palm Beach, Florida – January 2006 |
Mulry Fine Art |
Palm Beach, Florida – November 2005 |
Ventana Fine Art |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – October 2006 |
Long Beach Museum of Art |
Long Beach, California – May 2005 |
Coda Gallery |
New York, New York – May 2005 |
Ventana Fine Art |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – April 2005 |
Coda Gallery |
Palm Desert, California – March 2005 |
Ventana Fine Art |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – Oct. 2004 |
Coda Gallery |
New York, New York – April 2004 |
Coda Gallery |
Palm Desert – February 2004 |
Ameringer & Yohe Fine Art |
Boca Raton, Florida – January 2004 |
Waxlander Gallery |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – Oct. 2003 |
Venice Art Walk |
Los Angeles, California – May 2003 |
Long Beach Museum of Art |
Long Beach, California – April 2003 |
Coda Gallery |
New York, New York – April 2003 |
Coda Gallery |
Park City, Utah – February 2003 |
Coda Gallery |
Palm Desert, California – Dec. 2002 |
Waxlander Gallery |
Santa Fe, New Mexico – 2002 |
Venice Art Walk |
Los Angeles, California – May 2002 |
Coda Gallery |
New York, New York – April 2002 |
Coda Gallery |
Palm Desert, California – Dec. 2001 |
Ruth Bachofner Gallery |
Los Angeles, California – Dec. 2001 |
Long Beach Museum of Art |
Long Beach, California – May 2001 |
Venice Art Walk |
Los Angeles, California – May 2001 |
Coda Gallery |
New York, New York – February 2001 |
SELECTED COLLECTIONS
Goldman Sachs – London, England
Grisanti, Brown, LLC – New York, New York
Bank of Georgia – Atlant, Georgia
Palmer Wheeler, LLC – London, England
Reinsure – New York, New York
PepsiCo – Dallas, Texas
Pizza Hut Corp. – Los Angeles, California
Bank of New York – Hong Kong, China
Paper Products, LLC – San Francisco, California
Stafford, Frey, & Cooper, LLP – Seattle, Washington
Sotheby’s – Santa Fe, New Mexico
RECENT ARTICLES - EXCERPTS
“In the Periodic Chart, the elements of matter, such as hydrogen or oxygen, react to each other to produce certain formations found on earth and [in] space. Burega takes these designs in combination with terrain and dreams to create his paintings.” “Working from memory and dreams, he creates landscapes that capture the light hitting a leaf in Burega’s paintings.
- “Emotive Landscapes” - Art Talk, Nov/Dec 2004
“He begins with landscapes, and then instinct and emotion take over – a visceral and daring process that leads to Abstract Expressionist oils on board . . . (l)ight remains the protagonist of his work, manifesting in Burega’s subconscious and ultimately beaming a in Burega’s paintings.
- Palm Desert Magazine, Spring 2005
“ . . . (A)rtist Peter Burega has established a signature style – tactile paintings whose surfaces comprise layers of oil, wax, and glazes and which smolder with raw energy. An ethereal radiance seems to emerge out of the churning voids of red, brown, and black in Burega’s paintings.
- “Into the Void” - Southwest Art, October, 2005
“Burega’s mercurial nature and obsession with process turn out increasingly thoughtful and wildly expressive, and ultimately sophisticated pictures.”
- “Process Makes Perfect” - Art + Culture, Winter/Spring 2006
“Peter Burega’s powerful paintings are deep studies in color and geometry. They beautiful, but with a bruise here a scratch there, a scrape, a cut, a depth, a luminosity, an intensity, a look not only inn the way Burega’s brain views the world, but how he processes (it).”
-“Pictures of His Floating World – Devon Jackson, Focus Santa Fe, August 2008
“Ruins, angular structure, houses, churches and architectural layers combine with external environments. Internal presence of consciousness leads this interplay revealing the emotion, thought (and) insight below the surface.”
- “Albuquerque Journal, Friday August 7th, 2009
“(His) paintings are muted and lyrical, with a subtle grid-like quality – the result of hundreds of photographs of shadows and reflections . . .”
- “Bright Waters Series” – Santa Fean, August/September 2009