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JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print
JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print

JEREMY GEDDES 'Signal' (2025) Archival Pigment Print

Regular price
$850.00
Sale price
$520.00
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'Signal' by Jeremy Geddes, 2025
Stunning and surreal new edition by the acclaimed artist.
24 x 43.3 Inches
61 z 110 Centimeters
Archival pigment print on 100% cotton, 300gsm Hahnemuhle Matt photo rag fine art paper using Epson SureColor P7070 & P9070 printers.
Exclusively produced by Image Science.
Timed Limited Edition of 640 (#439/640)
Hand-signed and numbered by the artist in pencil bottom right.

ARTIST BIO

In haunting scenes that fuse photorealism with post-apocalyptic surrealism, Jeremy Geddes renders cosmonauts falling to earth, outsize pigeons in flight, and human figures bursting through walls and writhing in intense emotion.

The paintings emerge from a methodical process, in which Geddes creates and exhaustively reworks preliminary studies of composition, tone, and color that he then translates large-scale through layers of grisaille, opaque color, and modulated glaze.

Despite the dramatic suggestion of narrative, Geddes intends his paintings to be ambiguous and subjectively experienced. “I’m trying to leave the narrative...open to interpretation, whilst juxtaposing enough disparate elements to make some sort of interpretation necessary,” he says. “I’m keen to never give enough clues to block any potential explanation the viewer might bring. I want to spark questions, rather than answer them.”