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4
View In My Room
Painting, Oil on Canvas
Size: 24 W x 35.8 H x 0.4 D in
Ships in a Box
204 Views
4
Artist featured in a collection
A blonde woman in a black evening dress walks under her black and white umbrella. The right hand of the young woman is dressed in a black glove, on her neck there is a red necklace. The way the blonde is depicted gives a hint that there is a strong wind blowing, soon to be followed by the rain. The upper part of the young woman's body is almost blending in with the umbrella - the straps of her dress line up with the pattern of the umbrella and the line of her corset repeats the wavy line of the open umbrella. The umbrella, symbolically, can be interpreted as a veil that hides some mystery. Perhaps the young woman hurries to a date or perhaps she hurries back from it. Gloves is another element that often appears in the paintings by Anya Slonim. In this case, there is only one glove present, the second one is absent. Perhaps, the blonde being in a hurry forgot to put it on or lost it on the way.
Oil on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
24 W x 35.8 H x 0.4 D in
Gold
Not applicable
Ships in a Box
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a box. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
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Born in Moscow, Russia, into the family of the Russian-Polish intelligentsia – her Russian mother was an editor in the Soviet national daily newspaper 'Izvestia', and her multilingual Polish father, a professor and published historian, worked at the Polish University in Lviv, and later, at the Institute of Slavic Studies in Moscow, - Anya Slonim (nee Misko) grew up in an atmosphere of international history, culture, and art. On many a day Anya used to leaf through the French magazines that belonged to her mother - Gazette du Bon Ton, Modes et manieres d'aujourd'hui, La Guirlande des Mois – the miraculously survived stylish publications on fashion and design. Their beautiful Art Deco and Art Nouveau illustrations imprinted in her childish imagination would later inspire Anya in her own artistic work. In 1972, having graduated from the Moscow State University, the department of Fine Arts, with the Majors in Painting and Drawing, Anya started working as a commercial artist in the State Design Centre in Moscow, Russia. Anya, as many in the Soviet Union at the time, got fascinated with the passionate worlds of the dubbed Argentinian movies that were shown in the cinemas in Moscow. Especially, with the charming Lolita Torres. The beautiful actress and her ‘foreign’ facial features would become another source of inspiration for Anya and would appear on her paintings of femme fatales and elegant temptresses. However, before Anya could fully devote herself to her artistic career there was a certain dream of hers to still come true. Ever since she was a 12-year-old girl, she had dreamt of going to ‘America’. One of the reasons was her enchantment with jazz that she had a chance to listen to on the radio station ‘Baltika’ transmitting from Poland at her grandmother’s in the Western Belorussia. Her other fascination with the far away land of ‘America’ was created by the movie she had seen – The Magnificent Seven (1960). Anya had fallen in love with each of The Seven but in particular with the characters Steve McQueen and Yul Brynnen played. Anya’s ‘American’ dream was finally realised in 1990 when she, her two children and her husband immigrated and settled down in Tucson, Arizona.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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