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'BLUE MARILYN' SOLD (COLLECTION OF RIHANNA) Installation

Claire Milner

United Kingdom

Installation, Glass on Other

Size: 61 W x 61 H x 2.8 D in

This artwork is not for sale.
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1472 Views
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About The Artwork

Crystal portrait of Marilyn Monroe made with 65 000 Swarovski crystals (5ft x 5ft) COMMISSIONED AND OWNED BY RIHANNA “This portrait by the artist Claire Milner is at home in New York. She makes portraits of celebrities a bit like Warhol, but in her case, the Swarovski crystals replace the serigraphic technique. I find fascinating the shadows, the nuances, and the emotions that she manages to express thanks to subtle games of colored crystals. I am in love with this work. And I am in love with Marilyn. What is more moving than these candid eyes?” — Rihanna Featured on the website of the Estate of Marilyn Monroe INSPIRATION AND MEANING: This portrait of Marilyn Monroe was inspired by her own words (some of which are shown in white italics) and numerous images representing her in various guises. But who was she? “...my real name was Norma Jeane Baker. They changed it when they decided to build me up. They change whatever they want to...” There are as many different opinions about how she lived as about how she died. In my portrait I tried to capture some of the complicated and contradictary aspects of Marilyn - the glitter and the public facade, the sadness in the eyes: "I was never used to being happy, so that wasn't something I ever took for granted. I did sort of think, you know, marriage did that. You see, I was brought up differently from the average American child because the average child is brought up expecting to be happy..." I wanted people to think about the person behind the headlines when they look at this blue portrayal - not a typical blonde Marilyn: "It takes a smart brunette to play a dumb blonde." Most importantly, on the reverse of the flamboyant Swarovski Marilyn I painted a very understated symbolic representation of Norma Jeane; hidden and unseen, made only to face the wall, as a reflection on the life of a celebrity; whilst the Swarovski mirror image stares out at the world; her famous and glamorous alter-ego, Marilyn Monroe. In the end it is up to every viewer to apply their own interpretation to this portrait of Marilyn as people did to the woman herself. “People are used to looking at me as if I were a kind of mirror instead of a person. They don’t see me, they see their own hidden thoughts and then they whitewash themselves by claiming that I embody those secret thoughts.” The crystals used in this portrait definitely have mirror like qualities and typical of Marilyn herself, this representation is larger than life. The image changes mood in different light conditions and, in the semi dark, she looks like she is about to speak for herself. “I want to be an artist,not...a celluloid aphrodisiac.” August 5th 2012 was the 50th anniversary of the death of Marilyn Monroe. Far from fading into the past, her legend continues to grow. “I don’t want to get old. I want to stay like I am....”

Details & Dimensions

Installation:Glass on Other

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:61 W x 61 H x 2.8 D in

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British artist Claire Milner was famously commissioned to create the Blue Marilyn portrait for Rihanna, widely featured by the global media, but her personal body of work is made up of paintings inspired by her time spent in Africa focusing on social and environmental issues. In May 2023 Milner was selected as one of fewer than ten artists worldwide for Active Membership of the Gallery Climate Coalition, along with several blue chip galleries, institutions and museums. Her work was selected by the conference organisers to be exhibited in the Blue Zone of COP26. She works in collections which are continuously evolving around the theme of nature, our place within it and encroachment upon it. Environmental references such as climate change and mass extinction have been the central focus of her image making for more than two decades. Her artworks include diverse mediums including paint, paper and collage, and as a signifier of her familial ties to Italy, she sometimes incorporates the ancient art of mosaic - famous for animal depictions – and crystal methodologies as a symbiosis of past and present. Her portrayal of animals’ interchanges between the metaphoric and the literal, yet the impact of humanity remains implicit, even when the human figure is absent or plays a minor role in the composition. Her process begins with extensive research, engaging in hours of study, compiling statistics and viewing painful imagery of the consequences of poaching, habitat loss and climate change. A great deal of consideration is given to the integration of this material into the final composition, where realistic and abstract elements coexist, alongside carefully selected art historical references and themes from classical literature forming a balance of topical and historical narratives. Milner’s work has been displayed in museum exhibitions in the UK and her paintings have been widely featured in the global media including the BBC, BLOUIN ARTINFO, Channel News Asia, Elle, Forbes, Huffington Post Arts, The Observer, Save Virunga, The Telegraph, The Times, Vogue Paris and Vogue India.

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