David Kim Whittaker is a British painter born in 1964 in Cornwall, where they still reside.
A self-taught artist, most of Whittaker's paintings are based on an interpretation of the human head and its metaphysical core. Whittaker's portraits are ambiguous, with the aim to represent the universal alongside the personal. The works often juggle dual states of inner and outer calm and conflict – offering a glimpse of strength and fragility, the conscious and the subconscious, the masculine and the feminine. These universal states of conflict, clearly identifiable in Whittaker's works, are arguably reinforced by Whittaker's gender dysphoria and the personal struggle with a condition that they have learned to live with through the endeavour of expressing something bigger than oneself through painting.
David Kim Whittaker has been exhibited worldwide notably at the prestigious Fondazione Mudima in Milan in 2017 and was the recipient of the Towry Award (First Prize) at the 2011 National Open Art Competition.
Oil and acrylic on primed wood panel
92 x 92 cm | 36 x 36 in
Oil and acrylic on canvas
80 x 80 cm | 31.5 x 31.5 in
Oil, acrylic and collage on primed wood panel
66 x 66 cm | 26 x 26 in
Oil and acrylic on primed canvas
140 x 140 cm | 55.1 x 55.1 in
Oil and acrylic on canvas
140 x 140 cm | 55.1 x 55.1 in
Oil and acrylic on primed wood panel
92 x 92 cm | 36.2 x 36.2 in
Pencil, chinagraph, collage, acrylic, oil, ripped bible pages from Leviticus and wire
39,5 x 27 cm | 15.6 x 10.6 in