view additional image 1
View in a Room ArtworkView in a Room Background
541 Views
0

VIEW IN MY ROOM

CITY Collage

Scarlett Raven

United Kingdom

Collage, Paint on Wood

Size: 48 W x 48 H x 3.9 D in

Ships in a Crate

info-circle
This artwork is not for sale.
Primary imagePrimary imagePrimary imagePrimary imagePrimary image Trustpilot Score
541 Views
0

About The Artwork

City embraces our idea to consume and grow, to protect and own. Contained space is what makes us feel safe. Everything has their right place. This painting provides a sense of control and pride, which I admire. The free birds at the forground are typical of traditional landscape paintings which provide a sense of history and safety and most importantly familiarity. The composition is very different and offers a modern style of painting which i think sets off a great contrast. Transportation is evident in this painting and follows he current theme of my works. Scarlett Raven- Artist Statement My work embodies creation through movement and action. Layered with continual development, the painting evolves alongside me as an artist: a recorded journey of my feelings, experiences, insecurities and ideas. Painting makes me aware of my body, it’s like a swan plucking at its feathers, it’s the time when I feel like me and I feel my self, without it I have no idea who I am. It is an essential process of catharsis, as I feel any art form is for any artist. It’s the time when my heart rate slows to normal and I feel calm and clear, if I didn’t paint I’m certain I would go insane. From the moment my crayon hit the paper when I was four everything suddenly made sense and I haven’t stopped since. As I’ve developed as an artist I’ve found myself returning to the child in me as I strive to regain that pure, uninhibited, unpretentious expression all children naturally have. When I drew my first drawing I was a genius, now I am just a copycat. I want to move people with a shock of emotion, to free them for a moment from the confines of their conscious minds by making them aware of their own presence within the painting. There they have a new landscape to explore themselves in. My use of sculpture and thick layers of paint gives a third dimension, which can draw the viewer in and will move with the viewer around the room as the light and shadow shifts with them. To me life is endless, unstoppable movement and I use that in my style of painting. I want to break everything back down to the raw essence of who we are and what we are. My use of crude materials such as sticks and mud and almost childish expression, simplistic lines and bold colours underpin that intention. When I paint I throw my entire body and being into it, it’s a very physical, rough, passionate process and I never know until I step back what the end result will be. In this body of work I wish to depict the catastrophic effects of human avarice and our desire to breed and spread and consume endlessly while the rest of the world tries to balance out our excesses. I also want to show the hope, the essential good I believe to exist within us and the abundant beauty we are still surrounded by and can work to preserve. Redemption, creation, birth and its struggle, its frantic, frightening, stunning, liberating journey, the same journey we are all on, are all strong themes in my work. Animals are a great source of inspiration too, as is transportation, migration and movement. Flamingos, for example, shows the devastation caused by human expansion versus the birds’ attempts to co-exist along side us and fly free from our spreading mess. Beauty in the face of aggression, triumph over confusion, elegance and dignity in the face of chaos. Nature and the animal kingdom can teach us so much, tearing away our preconceptions and pretensions to reveal us as essential, magnificent sentient beings who are part of their world, as opposed to ego driven power-maniacs, working against it to achieve transient, delusional glory. This idea of transience is echoed throughout my work, particularly prevalent in Flowerpot, Tsunami and Deckchairs, where the innocent nostalgia of the naïve, consumerist abundance of the 50s is juxtaposed against the resulting ruin decades later. The purpose of my work is not to dictate my ideas but rather to inspire the viewer to ask those questions that, in turn, have inspired me. I want us to see ourselves with new, innocent yet wise eyes, to see what we are, what we’ve become and what we could be.

Details & Dimensions

Collage:Paint on Wood

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:48 W x 48 H x 3.9 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

BIOGRAPHY Scarlett Raven was born in London in 1986. She began painting at the age of four and attend the prestigious Central Saint Martins. Scarlett is daughter to writer, Siobhan Cunningham, and saxophone player, Raphael Ravenscroft ( Pink Floyd, Abba, Marvin Gaye and Gerry Rafferty's Bakerstreet) and grandaughter to Trevor Ravenscroft writer of the best seller 'The Spear Of Destiny'. At the beginning of her BA in Fine Art, Scarlett began to be recognized as an artistic talent, and was asked to participate in a variety of group shows. Just into the second year of her BA, at the age of twenty-one; Scarlett had her first solo show, Seascapes, on London's Cork Street. Scarlett was, and is, one of the youngest artists to have a solo exhibition on this famed street; and her entry into the art world as a professional artist captured much media attention and recorded selling's' of over £30,000 in just under two weeks of exhibiting. Scarlett counts Orlando Bloom (famed actor), Jim Beach (manager of the iconic rock band, Queen), boy band Take That and Lord Jonathan Marland as collectors of her works. 2007 also marked her first important commission, a painting for the Live Nations entrance, located on Oxford Street, in London. Scarlett has just completed the cover for a fundraising record called The Beautiful Game, released for ­Prince Harry's Sentebale ­charity. Scarlett has become a firm supporter of the charity Harry set up with Prince ­Seeiso of Lesotho, which raises money for vulnerable children in the mountain kingdom. Scarlett's passion of music, and desire to be able to reach a diverse group of people through her art has lead her to collaborate with a variety of musical talents. At the age of twenty, Scarlett was asked to design the album artwork for the band, Wiredasies. In January 2008, David Saw released his solo album Broken Down Figure (produced by Ben Taylor, son of James Taylor and Carly Simon), and asked Scarlett to create drawings for the cover of his album. Rozy Music's Andy Mackay and Paul Thompson asked her to work on the art work for there new band The Metaphors. Working with these artists has allowed Scarlett to stretch her artistic vision further, and begin to realize her future goal of creating works that will have the opportunity to be seen outside the confines of the gallery space, and be able to reach a wider audience.

Thousands Of Five-Star Reviews

We deliver world-class customer service to all of our art buyers.

globe

Global Selection

Explore an unparalleled artwork selection by artists from around the world.

Satisfaction Guaranteed

Our 14-day satisfaction guarantee allows you to buy with confidence.

Support An Artist With Every Purchase

We pay our artists more on every sale than other galleries.

Need More Help?

Enjoy Complimentary Art Advisory Contact Customer Support