An avid drawer into his teenage years, Laver nevertheless had almost no exposure to art history or painting until he moved to Victoria at the age of 19 to attend a two-year visual arts diploma program. “At some point in first year I fell head-over-heels in love with painting,” he says. His first instructor agreed, saying emphatically, “Mark, you’re a painter, and you are just going to have to paint for the rest of your life.”
A year-long backpacking trip across Europe followed and he met his future wife in Edinburgh in 1993, with whom he now has three children. In his mid-twenties he was recruited to join a small collective of artists who believed that contemporary art had not kept up with thinking in other fields—and he applied ideas from quantum physics, evolution, and non-Euclidean geometry to experiments with pictorial space, color, and narrative. Around this time, Laver also pursued a BA in Art History and Philosophy at the University of Victoria—where he specialized in phenomenology, philosophy of art, and the history of pictorial space in painting. “I did this solely for my art,” he says. “The idea was that I would learn the history of thought (philosophy) and the history of art at a higher level than I would at art school and this, in turn, would benefit my work. I figured I could continue to develop the technique part on my own." Laver has also been working all along as a cook, food writer, and jewelry assembler—part-time when possible—to support his family, carving out as much time and mental space as possible for his art.
His current and ongoing body of work depicts landscapes of a mysterious beauty that is at once luscious and moody, cohesive and in flux. Without reference to photographs, drawings, real places, or even conscious memories, Laver starts with a limited palette and no pre-existing plans and discovers his paintings in the act of painting. Each work provides its own surprises, as new symbols and motifs emerge, grow, and repeat, adding to his ever-expanding invented world. Most recently, Laver has retaken to a curved space technique that he started experimenting with in his twenties, opening increased formal and conceptual possibilities.
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[The following audio clips reproduce an interview with Mark Laver conducted by Alejandra Russi]
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I’m beginning to see the light, 2022Oil on wood12 x 16 in. (30.5 x 40.6 cm.)(ML 53)SOLD
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The beginning of a great adventure, 2022Oil on wood16 x 12 in. (40.6 x 30.5 cm.)(ML 55)SOLD
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Untitled, 2022Oil on wood12 x 16 in. (30.5 x 40.6 cm.)(ML 54)SOLD
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White Tree Study, 2021Oil on wood panel12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm)(ML 8)SOLD
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"when I stand back to look at the painting I want to see something I believe in, something fresh, new, alive, and never seen before, something conceptually relevant yet still intuitive, painterly, and visceral."
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"if I could make my paintings look like my favorite music sounds (earthy, emotional, low-fi, intelligent, poetic, both deeply personal and universal, a strange mix of deep nostalgia and original forward thinking) I would be happy."
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INSTALLATION