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15
View In My Room
Painting, Oil on Canvas
Size: 39.4 W x 27.6 H x 1.6 D in
Ships in a Box
969 Views
15
Artist featured in a collection
"Meat Your Maker" depicts the metaphorical transformation of a person to a piece of meat. While ostensibly dark, I conceptualised the painting as a symbol of channeled rage, inspired by a restaurant's initiative of rehabilitating youth offenders with employment in kitchens. It owes a stylistic debt to Francis Bacon but borrows its subject matter from Goya's still life, "Nature Morte avec Tranches de Saumon" (1812). Meant to evoke acoustic distortion," Meat Your Maker" pays homage to the album cover of The Clash's 1979 "London Calling", immortalising Paul Simonon smashing his Fender Precision against the stage of The Palladium in New York. Although the music of The Clash became emblematic of punk rock rebellion, the group are seen in retrospect to have been manufactured, a commercial boy band.
2015
Oil on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
39.4 W x 27.6 H x 1.6 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
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Rachel has made work all of her life to translate aspects of experience escaping spoken language. Her painting practice uses analogue and digital processes. She manipulates found imagery by hand and in Photoshop, to produce a foundational composition for painting. The images share a loose conceptual framework in which meaning can shift and emerge. Arbitrary contrasts trigger a process of reconciliation, while content divested of context simultaneously liberates and disorientates. The work is inherently political in its free disengagement with and re-invention of content. Composite images are transferred to canvas and warped within Classical conventions of painting. Thus the work speaks to changing mores of value systems. Rachel is interested in image trajectory and staying power—in memory, hard drives or transmission over the Internet. By re-presenting signs and symbols, she highlights an ambiguity of native origin behind their enduring presence, as recirculated shorthand for fictive and historical narratives. Influences are vast, but important among them are ideas of Jacques Rancière, Heidegger and performance art theorist Peggy Phelan, whose work on negation and the phantom (Female) body also resonates in Rachel’s curatorial practice and work with other artists.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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