An Evolving Body of Work by

Glenys Takala

New Works

In these recent pieces, I continue to explore material and surface through a process of layering and transformation. Collage has become both my method and my language—bringing together fragments that are found, altered, and recontextualized into compositions that move between intention and spontaneity.

Texture plays an increasingly important role in these pieces. I build up surfaces through tactile processes, allowing each layer to hold traces of what came before. These subtle shifts in depth and material create a tension between what is revealed and what is concealed.

I’m interested in how meaning forms through accumulation—how separate elements can coexist, overlap, and gradually evolve into something new.

Architectural

I’m drawn to architecture because it holds both structure and story. When I paint buildings, I’m not just capturing their form—I’m exploring the lives, moments, and memories they quietly contain.

There’s something powerful about balancing precision with feeling. Perspective and geometry ground the work, but light, color, and texture bring it to life. For me, painting architecture is a way of finding emotion in something solid—and inviting others to see the beauty in places they might otherwise overlook.

Floral

I love florals because they let me explore emotion without boundaries. Instead of painting flowers as they are, I paint how they feel—movement, softness, energy, and growth.

There’s a freedom in letting color and form lead the way. Shapes can blur, petals can dissolve, and compositions can unfold intuitively. For me, florals are less about representation and more about expression. A way to capture something fleeting, alive, and deeply personal.

Abstract

Abstract painting is where I feel most free. It allows me to move beyond the need to recreate what I see and instead focus on what I feel. Through layers of color, texture, and form, I explore emotions and ideas that are often difficult to express in words.

Each piece is an intuitive process—there is no fixed plan, only a response to the moment. I enjoy the unpredictability and discovery that comes with letting the work evolve on its own. For me, abstract art is not about defining something clearly, but about creating a space where viewers can find their own meaning.

Glenys Takala