What comes to mind when you hear the term ‘fractured light’? It could be the sun piercing through blinds creating a striped shadow or the burst of orange dots that you see after sun gazing for one second too long. Whatever it may be, we seem to hold a certain curiosity and enjoyment for the forms and shapes it creates.
For Michele Poirier Mozzone, her painted series Fractured Light is all about the sun’s reflection on the water and how it intertwines with the human form. Living and working in southeastern Massachusetts, surrounded by farm fields, cow pastures and horse stables, she has always been inspired by nature. For years after graduating with her fine arts degree, she worked with watercolour before tapping into the expressive nature of pastel. And, in 2016, she began translating her body of work into oil paintings, creating larger and more varied applications of paint with palette knives and brushes.
Michele’s paintings aren’t about any particular person, but the capturing of a moment in time, experience or memory. “Most of us have experienced the sound of bubbles rushing past our ears or the broken ribbons of sunlight and bizarre reflections on the water,” she tells us. Taking the reference images for the paintings with her GoPro camera, she picks out photographs where she sees potential, before enhancing the colour and composition in Procreate. “I try to be open to separating myself from the reference photo and intuitively changing elements of the painting during the process.”