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What does love look like? Drawing

Georgina Talfana

Switzerland

Drawing, Ink on Paper

Size: 41.3 W x 29.5 H x 0 D in

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About The Artwork

Georgina has just finished her drawing called "What does love look like?" The drawing is about a visit that she made to Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts de Lausanne, Switzerland to see Lubaina Himid's exhibition So Many Dreams. Georgina really enjoyed a previous exhibition of Himid's at Serpentine gallery, London several years ago and was very please to see that Himid was exhibiting in Lausanne. Her drawing is a collage of photos and drawings that she made during her visit and includes drawings of the exhibition, the view out of the gallery window and sculptures in the main collection. Her artistic process involves drawing the things that resonated with her on the day and then collaging them together. The final image aims to give a sense of her experience through merging the drawings together as one. In doing so it also combines many different points of perspective and scale, for example the sculpture of arms was suspended in the air above her but seem more like a hoop to climb through. The architects' trees that were displayed in a case are now positioned in the drawing on the top of the sculpture of sticks. The sense of feeling trapped in the lower section of the drawing is notable and perhaps represents the artist's experience of living in the high mountains which can been seen in the upper section. The arms and hands linked together represent her need for friendship and community. This is a large scale drawing measuring 105 x 70cm and subtley nuances the artists' sketchbook, copying and enlarging smaller sketches. It is also created in oil pastel, indian ink and graphite bar to mimic the artist pose and movement of sketching with an open book whilst standing.

Details & Dimensions

Drawing:Ink on Paper

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:41.3 W x 29.5 H x 0 D in

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My work is about the intensity of the city and how we navigate through it with symbols, images, maps and sounds. I often feel overwhelmed in the city as we are constantly bombarded with noise and I am particularly interested in depicting what I see as crowded and claustrophobic commuter situations, but others regard as normal conditions on their daily journey to work. My work generally starts at a tube station in London where I will draw or photograph anything that catches my eye along the journey. Rather like a flâneur, I stroll along observing society, waiting for things to find or interest me. Similar to the Surrealists, I love flea markets. In the 1930s Andre Breton, the leader of the surrealists, was fascinated by pieces that were regarded as being of no use anymore. He would go to the flea markets in the hope of being ‘called’ by certain items and pick up old ear trumpets and elephants’ feet and lots of African pieces too. Strolling through these flea markets led the Surrealists to understand that their inner desires, through our subconscious, affects our actions, decisions, and surroundings. Breton believed that our everyday encounters and chance findings are actually psychologically pre-ordained by our subconscious. When we find objects, they are already existing embodiments of our inner desires and that they just need to be found, in a chance encounters. My work engages with what happens next to the single drawings and photos that I have made, when I arrive home. It is important for me to rearrange them and create a new image combining and placing them, in order to express my feelings and experiences during the visit. I combine outline tracings of photographs I have taken, with drawings from my sketchbook and paste them together in layers with different amounts of opacity. When placing the images together I always aspire to make an aesthetically pleasing image but also to let the unexpected happen, for example when a girl’s head shows through a layer in just the right place. Even though the final images are not made in a sketchbook, I like to keep a nuance of the sketchbook in my work as the intention of going out in the world and drawing, is where my work stems from. Oceanic feeling has also had an influence on my work which is the sensation of being at one with the universe. For me it is something I feel in nature on the top of a mountain.

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