The Music Experience Collection
The Blue Room Collection is being developed as the second major chapter in the artistic canon of Jefferey Cornett, following the initial release of the Orange and Black Collection. While the Orange and Black works were born from urgency, disruption, and the emotional intensity surrounding the end of the Oak Street era, the Blue Room represents the moment after the shock—when reflection, depth, and clarity begin to emerge.
In this way, the Blue Room is both a continuation and a contrast.
Where Orange and Black carries the energy of collision and change, the Blue Room explores space, stillness, memory, and emotional depth.
A Shift From Fire to Water
Color has long carried psychological meaning in art history. Blue palettes have often been used by artists to explore introspection, solitude, and emotional depth, as famously seen in works from Pablo Picasso’s Blue Period, when he used blue tones to express melancholy and human vulnerability.
In this collection:
-
Blues become space rather than surface
-
Shapes move toward quiet structural balance
-
Texture becomes memory rather than disruption
The work is less about confrontation and more about absorption.
The Concept of “The Blue Room”
The title Blue Room is intentionally layered.
It evokes several ideas at once:
1. A Place of Reflection
A blue room suggests an interior space—somewhere one withdraws to think, process, and regain perspective.
2. A Studio State of Mind
For many artists, the studio becomes a psychological room where ideas settle and form. The Blue Room collection represents the mental studio after the storm of creation.
3. Emotional Depth
Blue carries associations with contemplation, time, and emotional honesty. The works explore these ideas through layered pigment, geometric balance, and atmospheric fields of color.
4. A Structural Counterpoint to the Orange and Black Collection
Together the two collections create a visual dialogue:
The Music Experience Collection
The Blue Room Collection is being developed as the second major chapter in the artistic canon of Jefferey Cornett, following the initial release of the Orange and Black Collection. While the Orange and Black works were born from urgency, disruption, and the emotional intensity surrounding the end of the Oak Street era, the Blue Room represents the moment after the shock—when reflection, depth, and clarity begin to emerge.
In this way, the Blue Room is both a continuation and a contrast.
Where Orange and Black carries the energy of collision and change, the Blue Room explores space, stillness, memory, and emotional depth.
A Shift From Fire to Water
Color has long carried psychological meaning in art history. Blue palettes have often been used by artists to explore introspection, solitude, and emotional depth, as famously seen in works from Pablo Picasso’s Blue Period, when he used blue tones to express melancholy and human vulnerability.
In this collection:
-
Blues become space rather than surface
-
Shapes move toward quiet structural balance
-
Texture becomes memory rather than disruption
The work is less about confrontation and more about absorption.
The Concept of “The Blue Room”
The title Blue Room is intentionally layered.
It evokes several ideas at once:
1. A Place of Reflection
A blue room suggests an interior space—somewhere one withdraws to think, process, and regain perspective.
2. A Studio State of Mind
For many artists, the studio becomes a psychological room where ideas settle and form. The Blue Room collection represents the mental studio after the storm of creation.
3. Emotional Depth
Blue carries associations with contemplation, time, and emotional honesty. The works explore these ideas through layered pigment, geometric balance, and atmospheric fields of color.
4. A Structural Counterpoint to the Orange and Black Collection
Together the two collections create a visual dialogue:
Coming Up
Upcoming Exhibitions
Extra Space
James Haul
Aug 16 – Oct 14
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Monarch
Stephanie Rand
Aug 28 – Oct 2
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Address
1234 Divi St. #1000
San Francisco, CA 23514, USA
(246) 351-3613
Open Hours
Monday – Friday: 10am – 5pm
Weekends: 10am – 9pm
Holidays: Closed

