

The way we change the mood
2022, Digital Art , geomentric abstraction, memphis milano, Caribbean memphis design
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The flux of shapes, darting colours shadows against the backdrop of tropical blues in sea and sky. The way Caribbean evening light makes the mood shift and change. The way it is superimposed on our consistent darkness and mystical location.
As our energy cools and revitalises after sunset, recharging for a new hot dawn.
- Country Saint Lucia
- Year 2022
- Styles
- Medium
- Canvas size 594cm x 594cm

Gordon Keddie is a Scottish-born artist, designer, and printmaker whose work radiates bold colour, emotion, and narrative. Born in Falkirk raised in Edinburgh and trained at Gray’s School of Art Aberdeen and Edinburgh College of Art, Gordon developed a unique artistic voice that blends the discipline of Scottish art traditions with the vibrant, tropical energy of the Caribbean, where he now resides.
After college he worked for six years as a theatre technician and Head Flyman to the Lyttelton Stage of the National Theatre in London, developing creative and construction skills, along with the understanding of production, performance and management.
His dynamic oeuvre spans digital and traditional media, from abstract paintings to intricate graphics, with standout works like 'Memory of Elephants' and 'Red Column' showcasing his ability to capture both fleeting moments and enduring cultural stories. Known for a playful yet precise approach, Gordon's work explores perception, texture, and form, inviting viewers into layered visual experiences.
Extending beyond galleries, Gordon's artwork has transformed wearable creations in his early screen printing years in the Caribbean, to the tourism retail sector, and to a myriad of advertising campaigns, packaging, identity and branding work in the eastern Caribbean, both as an art director of an ad agency, a design consultant to small business for Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), even designing the identity and flag for the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), and the iconic brand of Piton Beer, the beer of St. Lucia.
With a flair for innovation, he continues to push boundaries, merging fine art with advertising, promotion and presentation, aspiring to make bold, meaningful art accessible to all audiences and promote Caribbean life and products.
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Gordon Keddie's Caribbean Memphis
A Digital Reimagining of Place, Rhythm, and Color
Gordon Keddie’s work represents a contemporary fusion of Memphis design principles with a distinctly Caribbean digital graphic language, resulting in a style that is both globally referential and regionally grounded. Drawing inspiration from the radical postmodern ethos of the Memphis movement, bold geometry, unapologetic color, and playful defiance of convention, Gordon extends the vocabulary into a tropical, island-inflected visual system that can be described as Caribbean Memphis.
At the core of this fusion is Gordon's rejection of restraint. Like the original Memphis designers of 1980s Milan, he resists minimalism and functional austerity. However, where Memphis design often felt urban, ironic, and Eurocentric, Gordon’s interpretation replaces irony with warmth, cultural memory, and environmental reference. His palettes echo the Caribbean landscape: sun-faded pastels, saturated turquoises, coral reds, mango yellows, deep sea blues, and volcanic blacks. These colours are not decorative alone; they carry associations with climate, music, architecture, and lived island experience.
Geometric abstraction remains central, but Gordon softens and recontextualizes it through digital manipulation. Memphis zigzags, circles, and asymmetrical blocks are layered with organic rhythm, mimicking waves, wind patterns, coastal erosion, and the improvisational cadence of Caribbean music. His digital graphics often feel in motion, suggesting carnival, sound systems, trade winds, and the visual noise of Caribbean streetscapes. This sense of movement distinguishes his work from static Memphis furniture and pattern design, translating the style into a living digital form.
Materially, Gordon’s practice is rooted in the digital realm, high-resolution artworks, NFTs, prints, and adaptable design assets, yet it references tactile surfaces familiar to the Caribbean: painted concrete, weathered metal, signage, textiles, and vernacular craft. The flat laminates of classic Memphis are reinterpreted through gradients, texture overlays, and luminous digital depth, bridging analog memory and contemporary technology.
Culturally, Caribbean Memphis becomes a statement of postcolonial visual confidence.
Rather than borrowing Memphis aesthetics wholesale, Gordon reclaims and transforms them, asserting that Caribbean design can be experimental, global, and avant-garde without losing authenticity. His work resists tourist clichés and instead presents a modern Caribbean identity, bold, intelligent, playful, and self-authored.
Ultimately, Gordon Keddie’s Caribbean Memphis is not nostalgia or revivalism; it is evolution. By merging Memphis design’s radical freedom with Caribbean colour, rhythm, and digital fluency, he creates a visual language that feels at once rebellious, joyful, and unmistakably of the islands, positioning Caribbean design firmly within contemporary global discourse.
- Color profile description
- 48 bit color depth, 281 Trillion Colors
- Photographer
- Digital Original Studio




