Modern waiting area with two gray armchairs, a small round white table, a large potted plant, and an abstract painting on a white wall.
Modern art gallery with a large abstract painting featuring splashes of pink, green, white, black, and orange, framed in white, mounted on a gray wall, flanked by white marble and textured walls, with two potted plants and a glass-top table in the foreground.
Modern living room with gray textured wall, yellow armchair with a pillow, side table with a glass of water, and abstract circular art on the wall. There are potted plants on the floor and hanging pendant lights.
Modern living room with a large abstract painting of a leaf hanging above a brown leather Chesterfield sofa, with black and white pillows, a small table with decorative bottles, a tall floor lamp, and a large potted plant next to a window with multiple small potted plants on the windowsill.
Interior of a living room with dark blue walls, light wood floor, a large window with multiple panes, potted plants on a white radiator cover, a blue armchair, a light blue sofa with a yellow pillow, a small side table with a potted plant, a wooden table with a large vase and books, and colorful abstract artwork on the wall.

CONOR TURNER ART

Abstract. Raw. Emotional.

This is art that’s meant to be felt.

 

I create contemporary abstract expressionist work that is raw, intuitive, and emotionally charged. My process is spontaneous and physical—driven not by a final image in mind, but by the evolving relationship between material, movement, and mood. Every canvas begins as a conversation, a tension between control and surrender, where the paint often decides the direction before I do.

 
 
 

I work primarily with mixed media on canvas, building rich, layered surfaces that hold both texture and depth. My pieces are large in scale and multidimensional in feeling, often walking the line between painting and sculpture.

My inspiration comes from many sources: the landscapes around me in Ireland, the experiences I’ve collected through travel, and the quiet moments in between. Each piece is a reflection of internal movement—sometimes chaotic, sometimes calm, always honest.