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August Painting

Kate Kelton

United States

Painting, Acrylic on Wood

Size: 6 W x 6 H x 1 D in

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SOLD
Originally listed for $135
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About The Artwork

oe’s Train Station My great grandfather, Josef Fanta, was an architect, engineer, painter and sculptor. He was my father’s namesake. My father’s family fled Prague when Czechoslovakia was handed over to the Russians after the war. Fanta had designed the city’s central train station, the Praha Hlavni Nadrazi, along with other buildings of note, including the Ministry of Industry. Like his Czech contemporary and friend, Alphonse Mucha, he was an Art Nouveau titan. When I visited his work, I fell in love with the incredible adornments that embellish the structures. Sadly, the details of his studios, models and sketches are gone. Likely long discarded by the same soldiers that seized his home and businesses. What remain are the delicate parades of crumbling faces adorning archways. The undulating figures draped over windows and doors. Each likely symbolizing a different nomad crossing through the heart of Europe to get anywhere else - the migrant mix of cultures and classes that swirl around any hub like it. My family lost so much when Russian tanks rolled in. The real repercussions of politics - something that Americans only seem to be waking up to now - were always a tangible part of my life growing up. Metaphorically rebuilding my great grandfather’s train station right here in my little West Hollywood home, became as soothing as any balm or salve for the times.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Wood

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:6 W x 6 H x 1 D in

Shipping & Returns

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

When painting, headdresses and crowns deify Kate Kelton’s subjects. She uplifts the Unsung Sheroes & Heroes, Patriarchy Smashers, Warrior Survivors, Silence Breakers, Philosophers, Truth-Tellers, Whistle Blowers and Thought Giants of all stripes. She paints her portraits cloaked in the garb of statues Ladislav Šaloun sculpted onto the train station that her great-grandfather, Josef Fanta, designed for Prague in 1901 - 1909. Apotheosis through a reclaimed, reapplied Art Nouveau. Sampling her own lineage, she transforms a historical body of work, itself a thing of lasting beauty; exchanging granite for graphite, plaster for paint. In Photoshop, she first combines the desaturated faces she's found, sourced or shot of her chosen subjects, with the black and white photos from her family and friends, of the statues in situ. Then she uses graphite, inks and acrylic paints and glazes to create the works on panel or canvas, literally uplifting and elevating her battle-weary subjects to the highest reach of architectural strata. ​ 'Ancient and distant godlike beings, surveying a dying empire, trade places with the fresh blood of her subjects. The work presents a tactility against the digitized space, and represents a taking, an acquisition of power back from the tastemakers. Here, the mantle of the artist is above brand influencer, above internet commentator, above mere marketability. In their gaze is a warning, “Art is immortal. Come for me, why don’t you?”' ~ Micah Chaim Thomas "Kate's recent work is a matter of expansion through contrast - she is as ephemeral as her subjects are concrete architecture; she is structural when her subjects should slip through your fingers like too-fine sand. Taken as a whole, the works in her magnificent series Sentry are incredibly intelligent, but when looked at individually, you come to understand that these are statements of life beyond themselves.  The series take embellishments of a Prague train station designed by her great-grandfather, Josef Fanta, and combines these with portraits of women who have stood against the sexual harassment and assault rampant in Hollywood. These women, like Kate herself, have suffered in the era where powerful men, every bit as immovable as the train station, wielded their power without check. The portraits emblazoned on architectural elements, they are marked against the edifice, every bit as permanent, and perhaps even more defining.

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