- Urban Nation
- September 27, 2016
‘Neometry’, as a combination of neon and geometry, is the word that UK-based artist, Carl Cashman invented to describe his stylistic creation between grid-inspired modernism and contemporary Psychodelia. Cashman’s works are featured as a part of the opening of URBAN NATION Museum in 2017. […]
‘Neometry’, as a combination of neon and geometry, is the word that UK-based artist, Carl Cashman invented to describe his stylistic creation between grid-inspired modernism and contemporary Psychodelia. Cashman’s works are featured as a part of the opening of URBAN NATION Museum in 2017.
‘A pixelated youth’ was one of the main inspirations for UK-based artist Carl Cashman’s ‘neometry’ blurring the distinction between digital and analogue in a hypnotic and hallucinatory way. Although referring to digital forms, Cashman executes his paintings completely analogue by hand. Relying exclusively on sketchpad, pencil, tape and acrylic paint, he creates hypnotic, precise and graphically decisive works, at times bordering on the hallucinatory. Some of his vibrant geometric-based optical art is painted using UV reactive paint as another visual element that can only be seen in the right environment. Cashman works and lives in Devon, UK.